Using Ring Splints to Support Finger Joints
Learn how ring splints help provide stability and improve alignment in the finger joints for people with osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis.
Using Ring Splints to Support Finger Joints
By Holly Welling and Donna Rae Siegfried
If you have pain or trouble moving your fingers due to arthritis, loose ligaments or injury, you’ll need support to help you complete daily tasks. Similar to taping a painful finger to another or using a Popsicle stick, ring splints can support alignment, improve function and keep deformities from getting worse. Silver ring splints combine style and therapy, providing a benefit no other medical devices offer.
What Do Ring Splints Do?
Some people with osteoarthritis (OA) or rheumatoid arthritis (RA) may not be able to straighten a finger joint, which can make grasping difficult or putting on gloves downright impossible. In others, an inflamed tendon may cause a finger to feel locked in a bent position, causing pain and reducing function. Ring splints can be worn on any of the fingers to help these problems and other deformities, such as joints that become “stuck” in a hyperextended position or instability at the knuckles, which lets fingers cross under or over each other.
According to Cynthia Garris, an occupational therapist and inventor of silver ring splints, joint destruction and disease can affect the alignment of ligaments and cause joint instability. This creates a loss of support and decrease in power. Ring splints stabilize the finger and control the movement of the joint in its normal range.
“Swelling and pain are precursors to joint instability, so if you notice you’re starting to have these symptoms in your hands, tell your doctor you’d like to have an occupational therapist or certified hand therapist evaluate your hands and advise you about the benefits of a ring splint,” says Garris. “Once a joint becomes fused splints are no longer useful.”
Metal ring splints may also help improve function. In the only study of its kind published in 2004 in Arthritis Care and Research, 17 people who had finger deformities caused by RA volunteered to wear metal splints on their affected finger joints. In the 17 people, 72 silver ring splints were used on joints that were not actively inflamed. Results show that after one year of use, dexterity increased significantly from a score of 71 at the beginning to 85 at one year.
Ring Splint Styles and Types
Ring splints most commonly fall into two categories: swan neck splints, which are used to prevent hyperextension of joints beyond the neutral position; and boutonniere splints, which help straighten a joint that a person cannot actively extend.
Ring splints are available in plastic, if you want to try them temporarily, as well as silver and gold, for long-term use. If you plan on using them for years, you can have them crafted to look even more like jewelry by adding decorative bands and precious or semi-precious stones. Garris says that one splint can last more than 10 years.
Silver or gold ring splints are custom-fitted double-loops of flexible metal and are less bulky and more durable than foam or plastic ring splints. Because of this, patients are more likely to wear them regularly and benefit from treatment, explains Melissa Peavey, a Dallas-based occupational therapist and certified hand therapist.
“I have a patient who says that people are always coming up and asking her where she gets her ‘cool rings,’” says Peavey.
For more information on silver splints, visit SilverRingSplint. Similar ring splints can be found at OrthoPlex and plastic versions are available at 3pp.
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