Climber's hand with PEMF
PEMF UKCLIMBING · FINGER PULLEY

PEMF therapy for climbing finger pulley injury

The classic climbing injury. Pulley sprains take time. PEMF supports the slow ligament healing.

Reviewed 2026-05-07

In 40 seconds

Finger pulley injuries — particularly A2 pulley sprain or partial rupture — are the classic climbing injury. A pop or sharp pain on a crimp during a hard move is the typical presentation. PEMF therapy reduces local inflammation and supports the slow ligament healing process. Always alongside graded loading protocols and tape support.

Quick facts

Why this injury happens in this sport

Climbing-specific finger taping and graded reloading are well-developed protocols. PEMF accelerates the underlying tissue healing.

Recovery and return to sport

Climb on jugs/open hand grips only during recovery. PEMF 2–3× per week. Graded loading per accepted climbing rehab protocols. Most climbers return to crimping at week 6–8.

Contraindications

Standard PEMF contraindications: pacemakers, defibrillators, cochlear implants, insulin pumps, electronic implants; active malignancy without specialist clearance; pregnancy (over the abdomen); active infection; epilepsy without GP clearance.

Frequently asked questions

Will I climb at the same grade again?

Yes for the vast majority — full pulley healing supports return to previous grade. Some climbers move toward more open-hand grip styles long-term.

Looking for a PEMF clinic near you?

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