Scaphoid Lunate Ligament Tear

If you’ve had wrist pain since a fall, or your wrist just doesn’t feel right when pushing, lifting, or using tools, there’s a chance you’ve injured a key stabilising structure in your wrist — the scapholunate ligament.

It’s an injury that’s often missed, but if left untreated, it can lead to long-term issues like weakness, clunking, and even early arthritis.

🧱 What Is the Scapholunate Ligament?

Your wrist is made up of many small bones. Two of these — the scaphoid and lunate — are held together by the scapholunate ligament.

This ligament acts like a keystone in an arch, quietly holding things together. You don’t notice it when it’s working, but if it tears or becomes unstable, your wrist may feel weak, painful, or unreliable — especially during pushing or weight-bearing tasks.

🤕 How Does This Injury Happen?

The most common cause is a fall onto an outstretched hand, especially when the wrist is bent backwards and angled slightly toward the pinky side. This position puts a lot of stress on the ligament and can cause it to stretch or tear.

But you don’t always need a fall to injure it.

⚠️ Other Causes of Scapholunate Ligament Injury

There are three main ways this ligament can be injured:

CauseHow it HappensCommon in…
TraumaticA sudden force through the wrist (e.g. fall on an outstretched hand, drill kickback)Tradies, athletes, climbers
DegenerativeWear and tear over time due to repetitive use or ageingManual workers, middle-aged adults
InflammatoryOngoing joint inflammation (like in rheumatoid arthritis) weakens the ligament over timePeople with RA, lupus, or autoimmune arthritis

🛠️ Examples of Each:

In all three cases, the end result can be the same: wrist pain, instability, and loss of function.

🧩 Signs and Symptoms to Look Out For

🖼️ Why It’s Often Missed

Scapholunate injuries don’t always show up on a normal wrist X-ray. Early or partial tears may look fine — even though the ligament is damaged.

That’s why special tests may be needed:

🧰 What Can You Do About It?

✅ Milder or Early-Stage Injuries

With partial tears or early changes, many people can avoid surgery and recover with:

🕒 Recovery takes time — often 3 to 6 months — but many return to full function with guided rehab.

⚠️ More Severe or Long-Standing Injuries

If the ligament is fully torn or the bones are no longer aligned, you may:

🔥 Inflammatory Causes: What’s Different?

If the cause is inflammation (like rheumatoid arthritis), treatment may also include:

🧠 Important: Inflammatory joint conditions can cause ligament damage silently — so if you have RA and your wrist feels unstable, don’t ignore it.

🧠 Recovery Tips from a Hand Physio

🚩 When to Get It Checked

👋 We Can Help

At Crux Physio & Hand Therapy, we’re experts in managing hand and wrist injuries — especially those that are often missed or misunderstood.

Whether your injury came from a fall, your tools, or a chronic condition, we’ll give you:

Scaphoid Lunate Ligament Tear

👉 Book your appointment today at our Croydon clinic and take the first step toward feeling better.