Raising Handlebars to Ease Hand Pressure

Drozdster

New Member
My wife has a Trek Dual Sport+, but my question can be related to any "fitness" bike with straight handlebars. She has terrible arthritis in her hands and any pressure on them really decreases her joy of riding, but she really likes the bike. I have already added a stem riser and that helped a little bit in moving the weight from her hands to the saddle. I was thinking of a different set of bars and maybe an adjustable stem. I know the cables would probably need to be lengthened so I would have a shop do it. Before I visit one, I would appreciate some ideas on bars because of the huge variety, and whether or not an adjustable stem would help to "fine tune it". I think it will help but I don't want it to be a wasted effort. Thank you.
 
I know the cables would probably need to be lengthened so I would have a shop do it. Before I visit one, I would appreciate some ideas on bars because of the huge variety, and whether or not an adjustable stem would help to "fine tune it". I think it will help but I don't want it to be a wasted effort. Thank you.

Welcome aboard!

Have never changed a bar, so no help there. But I have gotten some relief with stem adjustments on my commuter.

Given that the best configuration for your wife may not be what you expect, an adjustable stem sounds like good insurance to me. Weight's not a big concern on the commuter, and the adjustable stem's been nothing but an asset.
 
@Drozdster, on my Sirrus X 5.0, Vado SL 4.0 and my wife's Vado 4.0, I replaced the stock bars all with the same bar:


32mm rise and 47mm backsweep are much easier on the wrists and hands than the bars that came with any of these bikes.

I'd start there before moving to a different stem. Sometimes the simple combo of more rise + more sweep does wonders.
 
I also have arthritis in my hands and sympathize with what your wife is experiencing.

I tried swapping parts and made adjustments over several seasons and found these to be the most helpful.
I added a stem riser with a suspension stem and replaced the straight bars with Jones H bars that have a back sweep. That helped but I got the most relief by adding ergonomic grips and using good quality riding gloves with gel padding.

Many claim a suspension stem isn't necessary if the bike has front suspension, but I tried one anyway and it did help. It eliminated most of the high frequency vibration that the front forks did not. There are several available but I chose this one from Redshift. I chose one with a 30 degree up angle, which gave me a little more bar height.

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Not cheap at $199 but I took a gamble and, for me anyway, it was worth the price. The trick is to use just a single soft elastomer in the stem.

These adds required cable extensions, which for my bike anyway, were available online. Not sure if they would fit the Trek though.

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If you're not a DIY'er, it might be best to let your LBS do the work.

Good luck!
 
I think this is a very personal plight and somewhat hard to nail down. I've tried a little bit of everything and it all seems to help some in the beginning. I've concluded that it's the ability to change position while riding that helps me the most. I now ride with horns added to the end of the bars so I can switch things up while riding... even holding one horn and one bar grip at times.
Screenshot_20260426_091109_Chrome.jpg
I prefer the ones not built into a grip so they can be rotated and fit independently. Sometimes I hold them as designed and other times I just rest my palms on the top. Again not staying static is the key for me.
My hands can go numb holding my tablet it the same position for 10 minutes... and that's with the weight resting on my lap with a pillow. So my issue isn't tied to biking alone.
 
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