Hand Exercises for Rheumatoid Arthritis | Arthritis Information
You need your hands to cook, clean, type, and do just about everything else. But you probably don’t think much about how important manual dexterity is unless you have rheumatoid arthritis (RA) or another type of arthritis that attacks your hand and finger joints.
RA is a disease in which the body's immune system engages in friendly fire against the joints. It often starts in your hands before spreading to the other joints.
“The hands and the feet are usually hit first, and these are the joints that are predominantly involved in everyone with RA,” says Eric Matteson, MD, a professor of medicine at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn. Hand exercises can help maintain range of motion, flexibility, and strength in your hands.
There is not a one-size-fits-all hand exercise prescription for people with RA, but a rheumatologist, physical therapist, or occupational therapist can help design a program especially for your hands. Here are seven hand exercises your program may include.
- Hand Exercise for Rheumatoid Arthritis: No. 1: Start by holding your hand upright and pointing your wrist, fingers, and thumb upward. This also serves as the neutral starting position for many of the hand exercises that follow. Hold for 5 to 10 seconds.
- Hand Exercise for Rheumatoid Arthritis: No. 2: Keep your wrist straight in the neutral starting position and bend the base joints of your fingers, which connect the fingers to the palm. Keep your middle and end joints and your wrist straight. “This is already a big effort for people with RA,” Matteson says. Hold for 5 to 10 seconds. Repeat twice daily on each hand.
- Hand Exercise for Rheumatoid Arthritis: No. 3: Keep your wrist and the base joints straight, and bend your middle and end joints of your fingers toward your palm, one at a time. Hold each position for five seconds. Repeat on all 10 fingers twice a day.
- Hand Exercise for Rheumatoid Arthritis: No. 4: Bend each finger from the base joint downward using your other hand to move your fingers. Repeat this movement using the second row of knuckles in your finger. Repeat this exercise on the third row of joints in your fingers, closest to the fingertips. Hold for 10 seconds. Repeat on all 10 fingers twice a day.
- Hand Exercise for Rheumatoid Arthritis: No. 5: With your hand straight and fingers pointing upward, bend your fingers downward so they are touching your palm. Do not make a fist. Instead, your fingertips should be touching the palm of your hand. Hold for five seconds. Repeat on both hands twice a day.
- Hand Exercise for Rheumatoid Arthritis: No. 6: Starting with your wrist, fingers, and thumb pointing upward, make an “O” by touching your index finger to your thumb. Hold this for at least 5 and up to 20 seconds. Repeat two to 10 times twice a day.
- Hand Exercise for Rheumatoid Arthritis: No. 7: With your hands in the neutral position and all of your knuckles straight, slowly and gently spread your fingers as far apart as you can, like a fan opening up. From this position, make a fist. Hold each position for five seconds. Repeat on both hands twice a day.
“These hand exercises are really effective for stretching and maintaining mobility in your hands if you have RA,” he says. “We don’t do these exercises for strength because the strength that comes with good hand mobility in the activities of daily living is quite satisfactory.”
with # 6 my therapist had me do the "O" with each finger...
and with #7 I used a rubber band as resistance toward fanning my fingers out..
I still do my hand exercises while on the phone at work.. or sitting in traffic in the car..
I think these are vital to maintaining our movement and flexibility!!
Thanks LYNN!!! <3
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