• What's the best way to treat trigger finger?

I was diagnosed with trigger finger recently but I had this issue for a very long time, around 4 months. What's the best way to treat this? I want to treat it without surgery first.

8 Answers

  • Hand Surgeon
  • Springfield, MA

Oral NSAIDs, static finger splints, topical anti-inflammatory, taping a finger, relative motion splints medication, therapy, and a cortisone injection are all nonsurgical ways to treat a trigger finger.

  • Hand Surgeon | Hand Surgery
  • Maple Grove, MN, MN

See a hand specialist to try a splint and steroid injection and see if it resolves the problem.

  • Hand Surgeon | Hand Surgery
  • Portland, OR

Best way is to try a steroid injection

  • Hand Surgeon | Hand Surgery
  • BIRMINGHAM, AL

Steroid injection

  • Hand Surgeon
  • Allentown, PA

Trigger fingers can resolve on their own, they can be treated with splints (available online), and many patients will get fully better with a steroid injection into the tendon sheath. Surgery should always be last resort, but it is a very predictable and short procedure, often done with patient wide awake.

  • Hand Surgeon
  • Chevy Chase, MD

Trigger finger is most efficiently treated with one or two Cortizone shots. If the symptoms continue after that, surgery would be the next step.

  • Hand Surgeon
  • New York, NY

One easy to try at home is to use a heating pad for 20 minutes twice a day until the pain subsides. Other treatment options include, but are not limited to, Occupational Therapy, or Steroid Injection.

  • Hand Surgeon
  • Great Neck, NY

The initial treatment for a trigger finger is a cortisone injection. Approximately 50-75% of patients with a trigger finger can be cured with 1-3 cortisone injections. If the injection(s) does not work, then the next step would be a simple surgical procedure.

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