Custom splints vs off-the-shelf options: what patients often hear in clinic
By HandTherapy·Education only; not individualized medical advice.
Splints (orthoses) can protect irritated tissues, improve sleep positioning, or support a tendon repair protocol. Whether a custom thermoplastic splint is worth it depends on diagnosis, anatomy, swelling, work demands, and insurance coverage — not marketing claims.
Two common examples in the HandTherapy learn library
- A thumb spica pattern is often discussed for thumb-side wrist tendon irritation patterns such as De Quervain’s tenosynovitis.
- A wrist cock-up splint is frequently discussed for nighttime positioning with carpal tunnel symptoms — but fit and wearing schedule should follow clinician guidance.
Browse all splint education pages in Splints & supports.
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These in-app guides pair with this article. They are educational, not a personalized plan.
Related articles
- Carpal tunnel syndrome: education, conservative care, and when surgery is discussed
Night symptoms, numbness patterns, and weakness are reasons to seek evaluation — education complements, not replaces, examination.
- Common hand surgeries: a cautious, patient-friendly map
From carpal tunnel release to trigger finger procedures, many surgeries share themes: protection early, motion when cleared, and clear red flags.
- Aging and hand health: risks, resilience, and realistic expectations
Hand function changes with age in ways that overlap with arthritis, tendon irritation, and neurologic conditions — nuance matters.
- Tendon glides: why therapists prescribe them — and how to stay in a safe range
Tendon gliding sequences aim to improve tendon glide without provoking irritable tissues — dosing and stop rules matter more than “doing more.”
Sources & further reading
- Splinting — American Society for Surgery of the Hand(accessed 2026-04-22)
- Carpal Tunnel Syndrome — AAOS OrthoInfo(accessed 2026-04-22)
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