All surgeries
Surgery & recovery
Thumb CMC arthroplasty
Removes the worn-out trapezium bone at the base of the thumb and uses nearby tissue to stabilize the thumb. Used for advanced thumb-base arthritis when conservative care fails.
Why it's done
- Persistent thumb-base pain that limits pinch, grip, or self-care
- Failed bracing, activity modification, and injections
Typical recovery phases
Timelines are general patterns. Your surgeon's protocol always wins.
- 1Weeks 0–4
Protect the reconstruction in a thumb spica.
Wear the splint full time; move uninvolved fingers gently.
- 2Weeks 4–8
Begin gentle thumb motion and gradual splint weaning.
Light functional use returns as cleared.
- 3Months 2–6
Strength, pinch endurance, return to activity.
Pinch and grip strengthening progresses with therapy guidance.
Red flags — call your team
- Spreading redness, drainage, or fever
- Sudden severe pain or new instability
- Numbness or color change in the thumb
Splints you may wear
Sources
- Thumb arthritis treatment — American Society for Surgery of the Hand(accessed 2026-04-22)