1. What the Finger Flexors Actually Do
The finger flexors (FDP & FDS tendons) run from the elbow, through the wrist, into each finger.
They generate:
- finger flexion
- crimp force
- grip endurance
- dynamic catching ability
These tendons travel through tight sheaths (tendon tunnels) and under pulleys.
When overloaded:
- friction ↑
- stiffness ↑
- inflammation ↑
- glide quality ↓
Flexor overload is almost always a technique + load problem.
2. How Flexor Tendon Overload Happens (Mechanics)
Flexor overload appears when repetitive tensile load (pulling force) exceeds tendon recovery capacity.
Trigger patterns:
1. Too much crimping (especially half-crimp fatigue)
Crimping recruits deep flexors heavily → fatigue → micro-damage.
2. Overgripping (excess force when not needed)
Flexor tension ↑ drastically.
3. Wrist collapse (ulnar deviation)
Alters tendon line → increases tendon friction inside sheath.
4. Low finger strength + high climbing volume
Muscles recover fast → tendons don’t → tendon lag.
5. No deload weeks
Collagen remodeling (tissue rebuilding) never completes.
6. Too many small edges in one session
Repetitive high-intensity tensile load.
Flexor tendons hate high repetition at high tension.
3. Flexor Overload vs Pulley Injury: Key Differences
Flexor tendon overload:
- pain in the forearm belly (middle of forearm)
- dull ache during gripping
- early pump
- pain when squeezing fist
- sometimes radiates toward elbow
- pain consistency increases with volume
Pulley injury:
- sharp finger pain
- pain localized at A2/A3/A4
- pop sensation possible
- pain primarily on holds, not at rest
If pain is not in the finger but in the forearm → This guide (G2).
4. Pain Pattern: What Flexor Overload Feels Like
Flexor overload has a characteristic pattern:
- forearm fatigue earlier than normal
- dull ache on inside of forearm
- pain increases with volume, not intensity
- aching after climbing, sometimes next morning
- gripping feels weak or imprecise
- massaging forearm gives temporary relief
- pain during wrist flexion against resistance
This is the classic precursor to medial epicondylitis (G3).
Catch it early = easy fix.
Ignore it = elbow problems.
5. Yellow & Red Flags
Yellow Flags
- morning forearm tightness
- pain only during long climbs
- forearm burning earlier than usual
- dull ache on half-crimp
- wrist pain only during slopers
→ reduce load but continue training lightly.
Red Flags
- sharp forearm pain
- pain at rest
- wrist flexion weakness
- pain during isometric hangs
- persistent swelling or thickening
→ stop climbing and start rehab.
6. Technique Errors That Cause Flexor Overload
1. Overgripping
Flexors work far beyond required force.
2. Pulling with bent wrist
Increases tendon friction in sheath.
3. Elbows flaring
Changes tendon line → more tension.
4. Hips too far from wall
Finger load ↑ → flexor load ↑.
5. Bad footwork
Foot slips → violent flexor catch.
6. Excessive small edges
Small edges = high flexor demand.
Technique mistakes convert normal moves into tendon overload.
7. Immediate Actions (First 3–7 Days)
1. Reduce volume, not intensity
Flexor tendons hate repetition more than load.
2. Light isometrics (20–30%)
Stimulates tendon healing without overloading.
3. Gentle tendon glides
Improves glide quality (smooth sliding in sheath).
4. No small edges / no intense crimping
5. No pump-based climbing
Pump = forearm congestion → tendon friction ↑.
Tendon should feel better after light movement — good sign.
8. Rehab Plan — The Three-Phase Model
Phase 1 — Pain-Phase Isometrics (1–2 weeks)
Goal: reduce pain + stimulate safe collagen alignment.
- 4× 30s holds
- 20–40% tension
- 1–2× daily
- neutral wrist position
- on large hold or jug
Criteria to progress:
→ gripping feels controlled & pain ≤3/10
Phase 2 — Slow Eccentrics (2–6 weeks)
Goal: tendon remodeling (collagen realignment).
- wrist flexion eccentrics (slow lowering)
- 8–12 reps
- 3–5 seconds down
- 3× week
- pain <3/10
Optional:
- finger rolling eccentrics with light weight
Criteria to progress:
→ pain only at high load, not at low load
Phase 3 — Progressive Loading (Return to Strength)
Goal: restore climbing capacity in a safe sequence.
- 2–5% weekly increase
- half-crimp first
- medium edges
- low-volume max hangs (not repeaters)
- avoid sloper compression early
Criteria for return to normal climbing:
→ no morning stiffness
→ no dull ache in long climbs
→ no pain on wrist flexion
→ strength symmetrical between both arms
9. Return-to-Climbing Protocol
- slab / easy vertical
- large edges, open-hand
- half-crimp on mid-size edges
- low-volume bouldering
- strength sessions reintroduced
- small edges
- steeper terrain
- dynamic movement
If pain reappears → return one step back.
10. Long-Term Prehab (5 min)
- 10–15 wrist pronation/supination
- 10 slow wrist flexion eccentrics
- 20 seconds light flexor isometric
- 10 extensor curls
- 10 scapular depressions
- footwork precision drill
This maintains tendon glide quality + reduces overload.
11. When to Seek Professional Help
- persistent pain at rest
- tingling, burning or nerve-like pain
- pain worsens despite load reduction
- finger strength decreases dramatically
- wrist pain or swelling
These indicate deeper tissue involvement.