Carpal tunnel syndrome: symptoms, tests and treatment
Carpal tunnel syndrome is compression of the median nerve at the wrist, causing numbness, tingling, pain or weakness in the thumb, index, middle and part of the ring finger. It often wakes people at night or appears during driving, phone use, typing, gripping or cycling. Mild cases may settle with a neutral night splint and trigger changes, but persistent numbness, weakness or thumb muscle wasting needs prompt assessment because long-standing nerve compression can become harder to reverse.12
Key facts
- NHS guidance says carpal tunnel syndrome can cause tingling, numbness, pain in the hand or fingers, a weak thumb, and symptoms that are often worse at night.1
- The little finger is usually spared because it is supplied by the ulnar nerve, not the median nerve.
- NHS guidance suggests wearing a wrist splint at night for at least 4 weeks as a first self-care step.1
- A 2022 Cochrane review found night-time splinting may improve short-term overall symptoms compared with no treatment, but evidence certainty was low for many outcomes.3
- Steroid injection can help symptoms temporarily, but AAOS/ASSH guidance says it does not provide long-term improvement.6
Typical symptoms
The classic pattern is pins and needles, numbness, burning or aching in the thumb, index finger, middle finger and thumb side of the ring finger. Symptoms often come at night because the wrist bends during sleep, narrowing the tunnel. Many people wake and shake the hand to make symptoms ease. Daytime triggers include driving, cycling, holding a phone, carrying shopping, using tools, gripping a steering wheel or typing with bent wrists.
As compression worsens, the hand may feel clumsy. Dropping objects, struggling with buttons, difficulty opening jars, reduced grip or loss of thumb pinch can appear. MedlinePlus warns that without treatment, people can lose feeling in some fingers and develop permanent thumb weakness.2 That is the reason persistent sensory loss or weakness should not be left for months as "just typing strain".
| Clue | Supports CTS? | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Numb thumb, index and middle finger | Yes | Median nerve territory |
| Little finger numbness | Less typical | Think ulnar nerve or neck referral |
| Symptoms wake you at night | Common | Night splinting may help if mild |
| Thumb weakness or muscle wasting | Severe sign | Needs prompt review and often nerve tests or surgery discussion |
| Neck pain with arm symptoms | Could be mixed | Cervical nerve irritation can mimic or coexist |
Causes and risk factors
The carpal tunnel is a narrow passage in the wrist containing the median nerve and finger tendons. Anything that increases pressure inside the tunnel can irritate the nerve: wrist position, tendon swelling, fluid retention, pregnancy, inflammatory disease, diabetes, thyroid disease, wrist fracture, arthritis, repetitive gripping, vibration tools or sometimes no obvious trigger.
NHS guidance says carpal tunnel syndrome is more common in pregnancy, with arthritis, diabetes, previous wrist injury, or with work or hobbies that involve bending the wrist or gripping hard.1 It can also occur with fluid retention and can be bilateral. If it arrives in pregnancy, it often improves after birth, but severe numbness or weakness should still be assessed.
What else can mimic it
Not every tingling hand is carpal tunnel. Cubital tunnel syndrome affects the ulnar nerve at the elbow, often causing ring and little finger symptoms. Cervical radiculopathy can cause pain, tingling or weakness from the neck into the arm. Peripheral neuropathy can cause both hands and feet symptoms, often linked with diabetes, B12 deficiency, alcohol, chemotherapy or other causes. De Quervain's tenosynovitis causes thumb-side wrist pain but not usually median-nerve numbness.
Red flags are uncommon but important: sudden weakness, stroke symptoms, severe neck pain with neurological change, hand infection, major trauma, rapidly worsening symptoms, or constant numbness with muscle wasting. Seek prompt care if symptoms are severe, progressive, or affecting safe driving, work, caring duties or sleep.
Tests and diagnosis
A clinician may diagnose carpal tunnel from the symptom pattern and examination. Useful checks include sensation in each finger, thumb strength, thenar muscle bulk, wrist and neck movement, and provocative tests such as Phalen's or Tinel's. These tests are imperfect. A positive test supports the diagnosis, but a negative test does not always rule it out.
AAOS/ASSH 2024 guidance says strong evidence supports using the CTS-6 clinical tool to diagnose carpal tunnel syndrome instead of routine ultrasound or nerve conduction and EMG testing.6 That does not mean nerve tests are useless. They can help when symptoms are atypical, severe, persistent, before surgery, or when another nerve problem may be present.
Blood tests depend on the story. If symptoms are bilateral, recurrent, severe or unexplained, a GP may consider diabetes risk, thyroid function, B12 or inflammatory causes. If pregnancy, arthritis, kidney disease or hormone conditions are relevant, the plan changes.
Splints, injections and surgery
For mild or intermittent symptoms, a neutral wrist splint at night is often the simplest first move. The splint should keep the wrist straight, not bent backwards or forwards. If it makes symptoms worse, is too tight, or presses on the palm, it needs adjusting. The Cochrane splinting review found night-time splinting may improve overall short-term symptoms compared with no treatment, but much of the evidence was low certainty and splinting is not a guaranteed fix.3
Trigger changes can help. Keep wrists neutral during sleep, driving, cycling and typing. Break up prolonged gripping. Change tool handles or mouse position. Avoid leaning on the heel of the palm. Treat fluid retention, inflammatory disease, diabetes or thyroid disease when present. But do not assume ergonomic changes alone will fix moderate or severe nerve compression.
Steroid injection into the carpal tunnel can reduce swelling and symptoms, especially in mild or moderate disease. A Cochrane review found local corticosteroid injection may improve symptoms and function compared with placebo in the short term, and may slightly reduce the need for surgery at one year in one trial, but the effect is not usually a permanent cure.4 AAOS/ASSH guidance states that corticosteroid injection does not provide long-term improvement.6
| Pattern | Likely option | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Mild night symptoms, no weakness | Neutral night splint, trigger changes, review | Low-risk first step |
| Pregnancy-related symptoms | Splinting, swelling management, maternity or GP review if severe | Often improves postpartum, but severity matters |
| Persistent symptoms despite splint | Steroid injection or referral discussion | Short-term relief may buy time or clarify diagnosis |
| Constant numbness, weakness or wasting | Prompt hand surgery or specialist pathway | Risk of lasting nerve damage |
| Atypical symptoms | Nerve tests, ultrasound or broader assessment when appropriate | Diagnosis may not be simple CTS |
Carpal tunnel release surgery cuts the transverse carpal ligament to reduce pressure on the median nerve. It can be open or endoscopic. A Cochrane review comparing surgical and non-surgical treatment found surgery probably results in a higher rate of clinical improvement than splinting at 6 to 12 months, but evidence comparing surgery with injection was uncertain for some outcomes.5 Surgery is usually considered when symptoms are severe, persistent, recurrent after injection, or there is weakness or nerve damage.
Safety point: do not keep repeating splints or injections for months if numbness is constant, thumb strength is falling or the thumb pad is wasting. That is a different risk category from mild night tingling.
A practical plan
Start by mapping the nerve pattern. Which fingers are numb? Does the little finger feel normal? Does shaking the hand help? Is there neck pain? Are symptoms waking you? Are you dropping objects? The answers shape whether this is likely carpal tunnel, ulnar nerve irritation, neck referral or something broader.
If symptoms are mild and classic, try a neutral night splint for 4 weeks, reduce prolonged gripping and avoid bent-wrist positions. If symptoms persist, worsen, or affect strength, book a GP or hand clinic review rather than just buying more braces. Bring a list of work tasks, hobbies, pregnancy status, diabetes or thyroid history, and previous wrist injury.
The health library can help you compare carpal tunnel with diabetes, thyroid disease, neuropathy, pregnancy-related symptoms and neck nerve pain. Use start here to prepare a short timeline, insights to weigh device and injection claims, and the stack builder if painkillers, sleep aids or supplements are piling up.
- Does my finger pattern fit median nerve compression or another nerve problem?
- Do I have weakness, thumb wasting or constant numbness that needs urgent referral?
- Should I try a neutral night splint, steroid injection, nerve conduction tests or hand surgery referral?
- Should we check diabetes risk, thyroid function, B12 or inflammatory causes because symptoms are bilateral or unexplained?
- What work, driving or caring adjustments should I make while symptoms are active?
References
- NHS, 2025. Carpal tunnel syndrome. link
- MedlinePlus, 2024. Carpal tunnel syndrome. link
- Page MJ, Massy-Westropp N, O'Connor D, Pitt V, 2022. Splinting for carpal tunnel syndrome. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. link
- Marshall S, Tardif G, Ashworth N, 2023. Local corticosteroid injection for carpal tunnel syndrome. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. link
- Verdugo RJ, Salinas RA, Castillo JL, Cea JG, 2023. Surgical versus non-surgical treatment for carpal tunnel syndrome. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. link
- AAOS/ASSH, 2024. Clinical Practice Guideline Summary: Management of Carpal Tunnel Syndrome. link
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This article is educational and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or a treatment recommendation. Medication uses described as “off-label” are not licensed for that purpose in the UK and should only be considered under qualified clinical supervision. Always speak to your GP, pharmacist, or a registered specialist before starting, stopping, or changing any treatment. If you have severe or alarm symptoms - unintentional weight loss, blood in your stool, difficulty swallowing, persistent vomiting, a fever, or severe pain - seek urgent medical care.