Conservative Treatment of Carpal Tunnel and Trigger Finger
DOI: 10.54647/cm321061 102 Downloads 12104 Views
                            Author(s)
                        
                            Abstract
                            Chart review of the past 10 years indicates that 400 patients came to this office with a complaint of hand pain.  Of this group of people, 80 had a trigger finger and we limited our group to not include the thumb. The trigger fingers were broken up in random distribution. The fifth finger was the least likely involved. There were 40 fourth trigger fingers, 32 second trigger fingers, and 18 third trigger fingers. There were no fifth trigger fingers, and for the purpose of the study we performed we did not include the thumb.   More than 50% of the patients with trigger fingers were greater than 50 years old, and almost all patients had already been to see an orthopedic hand surgeon. The author cannot understand why all hand pain is sent to a hand surgeon when a generally non-surgical problem should go to a rheumatology first to look for inflammatory joint disease or conservative treatment of the said trigger finger.
                        
                            Keywords
                            Trigger Finger, Hand and Wrist Pain, Carpal Tunnel, Inflammatory Arthritis, J Needle with  Patent, Needle Injection, Depo-Medrol
                        
                            Cite this paper
                            Stephen Soloway, 
                            Conservative Treatment of Carpal Tunnel  and Trigger Finger
                            , SCIREA Journal of Clinical Medicine.
                            Volume 8, Issue 2, April 2023 | PP. 153-156.
                            10.54647/cm321061