Non-Surgical Regenerative Medicine for Hand & Wrist Pain

The human wrist is an engineering marvel containing eight small bones. The extraordinary complexity of the bones, muscles, joints, tendons, ligaments, cartilage, and nerves give the wrist tremendous flexibility and strength. As a result, the wrist supports and moves the hand with an exceptional range of motion, enabling us to create, construct, and manipulate the world around us.

Yet the same complexity of the wrist that empowers us to do so much also leaves us vulnerable to excruciating pain if any of the moving parts become injured. Not only does wrist pain rob us of the joys of creating, but it can also make completing simple daily tasks an excruciating challenge. 

Regenerative medicine for wrist pain can restore the range of motion you need to enjoy your life. QC Kinetix delivers non-surgical wrist pain relief by activating your body’s natural abilities to repair and heal itself. We go to the source of your pain to resolve it naturally.

Hand and Wrist Pain Causes and Potential Treatments

Wrist pain results from a sudden injury, repetitive stress, or degeneration. In each case, non-surgical wrist pain management strategies typically involve ice, heat, elevation, compression, anti-inflammatory medicines, and rest. Surgery is an option when these fail to produce the wrist pain relief you need. 

But surgery also causes damage to the wrist as well as additional pain. And when you complete the physical therapy and painful recovery, the surgery site is left highly vulnerable to the development of arthritis. While surgery may be required to repair some sudden wrist injuries, regenerative medicine for wrist pain can often effectively resolve the pain and restore the injured tissues.

Direct trauma is the most common cause of wrist pain. These sudden injuries include fractures, dislocations, sprains, and strains. Sports injuries, car accidents, and falls are common causes of this type of damage. 

Repetitive stress injuries are more subtle and develop over time. For instance, regularly and repeatedly hitting a tennis ball, playing the violin, or typing can result in gradual and cumulative damage to the wrist. Carpal tunnel syndrome is a common and painful example of a repetitive stress injury to the wrist. 

Other forms of wrist pain stem from degenerative medical conditions. For instance, osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, ganglion cysts, carpal tunnel atrophy, and Kienbock disease all cause deterioration of various components of the wrist joint, resulting in tremendous pain.

Regenerative Medicine for Hand and Wrist Pain

At QC Kinetix, we utilize natural biologic solutions to help decrease wrist pain from a sudden injury, repetitive stress, or degenerative conditions like arthritis. Our treatments go to the source of your pain and harness your body’s innate restorative abilities to improve the overall health of your wrist. Rather than mask the pain or attempt wrist pain management, we work to heal the pain source. Our goal is to see you return to the activities you love, free from the limitations of wrist pain.

Every case of wrist pain is unique and requires personalized treatment and attention. The QC Kinetix concierge approach puts your needs, comfort, and health at the center of all we do. When you come in for your free consultation, we will conduct a thorough examination and review your medical records. If our regenerative medicine for wrist pain fits your needs, we will develop a customized treatment plan, explain it thoroughly, and answer all your questions. 

Watch our QC Kinetix Patient Testimonials to learn how our wrist pain relief without surgery has helped other patients. Then, find out more on our Frequently Asked Questions page.

When you’re ready to experience genuine wrist pain relief without surgery or drugs, schedule your free consultation. Then get ready to say goodbye to your pain.

Patient Testimonials

Frequently Asked Questions

The timeframe varies from person to person, but many individuals experience improvement within a few weeks.

Yes, regenerative medicine is a safe and natural approach to healing wrist and hand pain.

This is an extremely important question. In our opinion, success isn’t just a matter of having less overall pain. We strive to improve your overall quality of life. Sure, this includes decreasing your pain levels, but we also want to see things like improved function, range of motion, improved sleep patterns, taking fewer medications (or lower doses), and being able to enjoy life more. Instead of just looking at a simple pain scale number, we focus on quality-of-life metrics. In this light, the vast majority of our patients have success with regenerative medicine for their knees.

Class IV laser therapy is a helpful adjuvant to the regenerative medicine therapies we use. When used alone, it is useful for some temporary relief only. We utilize it in combination with our additional protocols to improve the tissue environment.

A series of the biologic regenerative medicine therapies; consideration of appropriate knee bracing, if warranted; and physical therapy after the initial treatment series.

When left untreated, sports injuries can lead to local scarring of tissue.  The chronic pain of sports injuries can also put undue stress on other parts of the musculoskeletal system that can lead to pain in other areas as well.

The pain due to muscle tears, tendon injuries, ligament injuries, bursitis, and more.

There are many ways to work on low back pain because it is a very complicated problem with many potential causes.  While we use our regenerative medicine protocols successfully with many low back pain issues, we also strongly encourage things like physical therapy, Pilates, and yoga to help enhance the results you can obtain from our protocols.

In many cases, wrist and hand pain can be effectively treated without surgery using regenerative medicine.

The pain related to osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, and psoriatic arthritis.

Usually, this is determined by a good history and physical exam, followed by imaging with x-ray, ultrasound, MRI, or a combination of all three modalities.  Sometimes, blood work may also be warranted in the work-up of arthritis.