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Trigger Finger in my trigger finger
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moody, p.i. |
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Joined: March 2002 Posts: 15664 Location: SoCal | Got a physical issue and I want to put it out there to see if it rings a bell and what others have done. My trigger finger (left index finger) has a mild form of trigger finger. I can play but when I straighten it out, it pops and after a while, becomes sore. I've had a cortizone shot and it didn't solve the problem. Anybody have this and fixed it (short of surgery)? | ||
Patch |
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Joined: May 2006 Posts: 4226 Location: Steeler Nation, Hudson Valley Contingent | For some people, trigger finger is handled by cortisone. My brother is that kind of person. He has had several shots over his years as a handyman and kept on working the whole time. Other people find cortisone to be pretty much useless. That would be me. I have had surgeries to repair four fingers and a thumb! Each one started with getting a shot that simply didn't do the trick. If it goes that way for you, the surgery is pretty common and straightforward. (One of my surgeons described it as a "chip shot".) Recuperation for me was reasonably swift, and the fingers have worked fine ever since. Here's hoping you can get it squared away. Trigger finger can range from mildly annoying to downright disabling! Hopefully, yours is on the lesser end of that scale. | ||
Love O Fair |
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Joined: February 2016 Posts: 1802 Location: When?? | My wife had the issue about 20 years ago, and found that if she backhands me instead of a palm slapping, it corrected the problem. It was either that, or the surgery, that fixed it. Cortisone didn't work very well for her, either, (only for a few days) and it kept flinging out the injection holes and onto my clothes. It seems that the surgery was relatively minor and healed in a few weeks. No problems since then. She stopped breaking the yolks when flipping fried eggs, and the palm slaps returned to normal, too. PS: I was just on the phone with her (tying to keep my distance) and asked her about it, and she said that her problem was in both the center knuckle and the back (wrist end) joints of her finger, and that the surgery was on both of those joints.. so it may have been be different than classic "trigger finger". Which knuckle is it affecting your hand? Edited by Love O Fair 2023-08-11 9:05 PM | ||
seesquare |
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Joined: November 2002 Posts: 3611 Location: Pacific Northwest Inland Empire | Might be more popular with physical therapists than psychotherapists. Sorry Paul, I got nothin'. Haven't used my trigger finger for over 25 years. | ||
Guitsome |
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Joined: April 2011 Posts: 119 Location: NH | Paul, get the surgical procedure done. It’s quick, painless, but most of all, effective. Pain mitigation is immediate. You’ll be playing the guitar the day they/you remove the bandage. Golfing 2 weeks after the procedure. Oh, and the fix is The Fix. It’s permanent. You’re waisting your time with the cortisone. The procedure takes about 5 minutes with local anesthesia/pain killer. Heck, you’re gonna spend more time in the recovery room munching on crackers and sipping lemonade! Ask me how I know. Right hand - 6 months ago. Left hand - 14 months ago. I think any post surgery discomfort is the result of atrophy from not using the finger properly. (It doesn’t take long.) Even the finger/hand muscles need to regain their strength. Good luck to ya! | ||
MWoody |
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Joined: December 2003 Posts: 13987 Location: Upper Left USA | Getting old isn't easy... Hope it all works out! | ||
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