Tendon glides: why therapists prescribe them — and how to stay in a safe range
By HandTherapy·Education only; not individualized medical advice.
“Tendon glides” usually refers to controlled finger and wrist motion patterns used in hand therapy to encourage tendons to move through their pulleys without aggressive stretching. They are commonly discussed for flexor tendon irritation patterns and related stiffness — but the timing relative to injury or surgery is not universal.
If you are cleared for gentle home practice
HandTherapy.app includes a guided session for tendon glides and a separate pattern for median nerve glides. These pages include stop rules and expected sensations — stop and ask your clinician if symptoms spike or numbness spreads.
Where tendon glide education often shows up
Therapists may discuss tendon health alongside conditions such as trigger finger or De Quervain’s tenosynovitis. Those pages link splint concepts and sources suitable for shared decision-making with a clinician.
Explore on HandTherapy.app
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.
- Custom splints vs off-the-shelf options: what patients often hear in clinic
Thermoplastic custom fitting can improve comfort and joint positioning — but access, cost, and diagnosis-specific rules vary widely.
- 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.
Sources & further reading
- Tendonitis — AAOS OrthoInfo(accessed 2026-04-22)
- De Quervain's Tendinosis — AAOS OrthoInfo(accessed 2026-04-22)
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