Corticosteroid Injection
Corticosteroid injection is a common second-line treatment for trigger finger, used when symptoms persist despite splinting or therapy. It involves injecting a steroid into the flexor tendon sheath near the A1 pulley to reduce inflammation and allow smoother tendon movement. Most patients experience symptom relief within a few days, with success rates around 70–90%. It may be less effective in diabetics and can cause temporary blood sugar elevation. Rare side effects include skin thinning, discoloration, or tendon rupture.
Treatment Type: Procedural
Treatment Class: N/A
Treatment Modality: N/A
Review Summary
Based on the review by Dr. Curbside, Corticosteroid Injection appears to be an effective treatment for Stenosing Tenosynovitis (trigger finger), particularly when other conservative treatments have failed. The injection provides fast relief by reducing inflammation and can often successfully resolve symptoms, especially in non-diabetic patients.
This summary was generated by users' reviews
Breakdown by Category
Each categories are rated on a 1–5 scale, with 5 being the most favorable outcome and 1 being the least. These scores are averaged across all user reviews to provide a clear sense of how this treatment typically performs in each area.
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4.0
AI Summary of User Experiences
Not medical advice.
Based on the review by Dr. Curbside, Corticosteroid Injection appears to be an effective treatment for Stenosing Tenosynovitis (trigger finger), particularly when other conservative treatments have failed. The injection provides fast relief by reducing inflammation and can often successfully resolve symptoms, especially in non-diabetic patients.
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