TFCC Injuries in Climbers

Rachel Rubin-Sarganis MScPT | Physiotherapist | Parkway Physiotherapy Tuscany Village

What Is the TFCC?

The Triangular Fibrocartilage Complex (TFCC) is a group of structures located on the small-finger (ulnar) side of the wrist that help stabilize and cushion the joint between the ulna (one of the forearm bones) and the carpal bones (small wrist bones).

  • A triangular pad of fibrocartilage with surrounding ligaments and the extensor carpi ulnaris (ECU) tendon sheath
  • Lives on the pinky (ulnar) side of your wrist
  • Functions like a shock absorber + seatbelt
    • Cushions the ulna and carpal bones
    • Keeps the radius and ulna aligned as you rotate, pull, or push

Climbing load points: slopers, underclings, gastons, twisting pinches, dynamic mantles.

Early Clues You Might Have a TFCC Injury

  • Deep ache or sharp pain on the wrist’s pinky side
  • Clicking or a “giving way” feeling with rotation or weight bearing
  • Pain with heavy pronation/supination or when leaning hard on slopers and gastons
  • Local tenderness or swelling in the hollow beside the ulna

Diagnosis Pathway

Sports medicine and climbing-health literature recommend a stepwise algorithm:

1. Clinical Assessment

  • History of climbing loads and any traumatic fall
  • Palpation and specific tests: TFCC load test, ulnar fovea sign, piano-key sign

2. Imaging

  • X-ray: rules out fractures and checks ulna length (positive ulnar variance increases TFCC stress)
  • MRI or MR arthrogram: gold standard to see tears or degeneration
  • Diagnostic arthroscopy: used when MRI is inconclusive or surgery is considered

Your Recovery Map

Think three overlapping goals, not just time off.

Stabilize & Protect

  • Wrist brace or splint for 4–6 weeks if pain is significant
  • Gentle motion (pain-free) to maintain circulation

Rebuild Motion & Strength

  • Controlled pronation–supination and ulnar/radial deviation drills
  • Isometric wrist holds in neutral and slight ulnar deviation
  • Gradual grip and forearm strengthening

Return to Climbing Skills

  • Begin with easy climbs and open-hand grips
  • Slowly add twisting and compression moves, then underclings and gastons
  • Expect 8–12 weeks or longer for a full return depending on tear size and demands

Long-Term Wrist Care for Climbers

  • Warm up every session with wrist circles and progressive hangs
  • Mix grips—avoid overloading the ulnar side day after day
  • Build scapular and core strength so wrists aren’t the first structure to fail
  • Respect fatigue: most TFCC injuries occur late in sessions

Quick Exercise Guide

ExercisePurposeFrequency
Pronation–Supination with light weightRestore rotation control2–3×/week
Ulnar/Radial Deviation with bandStrengthen ulnar stabilizers2–3×/week
Isometric Wrist HoldsBuild joint stability2×/week
Scapular Stability DrillsOffload the wrist2–3×/week

Bottom Line

The TFCC is the wrist’s main shock absorber and stabilizer.
Early recognition, stepwise imaging, and progressive reloading let most climbers return to pain-free, powerful movement—without chronic wrist trouble.

rachel

Written and reviewed by Rachel Rubin-Sarganis, MPT
Published on September 25, 2025
Last updated on September 25, 2025

Parkway Physiotherapy Tuscany Village
1646 McKenzie Ave #101, Victoria, BC V8N 0A3
Tel. 778-432-3333
Book with Rachel: parkwayphysiotuscanyvillage.janeapp.com/Rachel

Similar Posts