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Patient-Reported Symptom Relief and Use of Analgesics After Open Release of Trigger Finger : A Prospective, Multicenter Cohort Study With 6 Months Follow-Up

Bitar, Hasan ; Harrysson, Alfred ; Flondell, Magnus LU orcid ; Byström, Martin ; Björkman, Anders LU and Strömberg, Joakim (2026) In Journal of Hand Surgery
Abstract

Purpose To investigate patient-reported symptom relief day-by-day and the use of postoperative analgesics after open trigger finger release. The primary outcome of this study was the number of days to resolution of pain. Secondary outcomes were the use of analgesics and the number of days to complete resolution of stiffness and triggering. Methods In this prospective, multicenter cohort study, a total of 107 adult patients with clinically diagnosed trigger finger were included. Patients recorded daily visual analog scale scores for pain and any presence of residual stiffness and/or triggering for 6 weeks after surgery. Daily use of analgesics was also documented. Results Ninety-nine patients (92.5%) sent in follow-up forms. Three... (More)

Purpose To investigate patient-reported symptom relief day-by-day and the use of postoperative analgesics after open trigger finger release. The primary outcome of this study was the number of days to resolution of pain. Secondary outcomes were the use of analgesics and the number of days to complete resolution of stiffness and triggering. Methods In this prospective, multicenter cohort study, a total of 107 adult patients with clinically diagnosed trigger finger were included. Patients recorded daily visual analog scale scores for pain and any presence of residual stiffness and/or triggering for 6 weeks after surgery. Daily use of analgesics was also documented. Results Ninety-nine patients (92.5%) sent in follow-up forms. Three patients (2.8%) sent in incomplete forms, leaving 96 with complete data (90%). At the 6-week follow-up, 61 patients (64%) reported complete relief of all symptoms. The median number of days to total symptom relief was 11 days for pain (range 1–39, n = 74), 12 days for stiffness (range 11–39, n = 64), and instant relief of triggering after surgery (range 1–36, n = 77). Median number of days for analgesics usage was 1 for paracetamol and 0 for ibuprofen; 19 patients (20%) did not take any analgesics. Conclusions Open release is an effective treatment for trigger finger with limited need for nonprescription drugs, since almost all patients reported full resolution of triggering within 6 weeks, and analgesic use was minimal. However, 23% of the patients reported persisting pain and 33% residual stiffness at 6 weeks, indicating that the recovery process is longer than expected. Level of evidence Therapeutic 2b.

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author
; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
epub
subject
keywords
A1 pulley release, snapping finger, stenosing tenosynovitis, trigger finger, trigger thumb
in
Journal of Hand Surgery
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • pmid:41642154
  • scopus:105029217662
ISSN
0363-5023
DOI
10.1016/j.jhsa.2025.12.006
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
331fe4a7-2b69-4be7-8fd6-bf448b91f277
date added to LUP
2026-02-20 14:13:05
date last changed
2026-04-03 22:00:03
@article{331fe4a7-2b69-4be7-8fd6-bf448b91f277,
  abstract     = {{<p>Purpose To investigate patient-reported symptom relief day-by-day and the use of postoperative analgesics after open trigger finger release. The primary outcome of this study was the number of days to resolution of pain. Secondary outcomes were the use of analgesics and the number of days to complete resolution of stiffness and triggering. Methods In this prospective, multicenter cohort study, a total of 107 adult patients with clinically diagnosed trigger finger were included. Patients recorded daily visual analog scale scores for pain and any presence of residual stiffness and/or triggering for 6 weeks after surgery. Daily use of analgesics was also documented. Results Ninety-nine patients (92.5%) sent in follow-up forms. Three patients (2.8%) sent in incomplete forms, leaving 96 with complete data (90%). At the 6-week follow-up, 61 patients (64%) reported complete relief of all symptoms. The median number of days to total symptom relief was 11 days for pain (range 1–39, n = 74), 12 days for stiffness (range 11–39, n = 64), and instant relief of triggering after surgery (range 1–36, n = 77). Median number of days for analgesics usage was 1 for paracetamol and 0 for ibuprofen; 19 patients (20%) did not take any analgesics. Conclusions Open release is an effective treatment for trigger finger with limited need for nonprescription drugs, since almost all patients reported full resolution of triggering within 6 weeks, and analgesic use was minimal. However, 23% of the patients reported persisting pain and 33% residual stiffness at 6 weeks, indicating that the recovery process is longer than expected. Level of evidence Therapeutic 2b.</p>}},
  author       = {{Bitar, Hasan and Harrysson, Alfred and Flondell, Magnus and Byström, Martin and Björkman, Anders and Strömberg, Joakim}},
  issn         = {{0363-5023}},
  keywords     = {{A1 pulley release; snapping finger; stenosing tenosynovitis; trigger finger; trigger thumb}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Journal of Hand Surgery}},
  title        = {{Patient-Reported Symptom Relief and Use of Analgesics After Open Release of Trigger Finger : A Prospective, Multicenter Cohort Study With 6 Months Follow-Up}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhsa.2025.12.006}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.jhsa.2025.12.006}},
  year         = {{2026}},
}