Your doctor may recommend different treatment options depending on your particular symptoms and the severity of your condition.
Rest up.
Your doctor will likely recommend that you avoid engaging in any activity that causes symptoms or makes your symptoms feel worse. That may mean resting your hand and wrist for a couple of weeks. This initial “avoidance” therapy will help your doctor get a better picture of the extent and severity of your nerve compression.
Manage the pain.
Your doctor may prescribe or recommend the use of anti-inflammatory medications (like aspirin or ibuprofen) and cold packs that will help to reduce inflammation as well as reduce the pain associated with your carpal tunnel syndrome. Often a local injection of cortisone or lidocaine, or both, helps to further reduce inflammation.
Get the right support.
A specially designed brace worn at night helps to keep the affected wrist in a natural position that doesn’t compromise, or put extra pressure on, the median nerve. Your doctor may also want you to wear a splint to support your hand and wrist during the day while you’re engaged in routine activities, like working on the computer.
Understand your surgical options.
If you are still experiencing pain after all other conservative measures have been taken, your doctor may suggest surgery to help relieve your pain and restore your mobility. Surgery to relieve the symptoms of carpal tunnel syndrome involves releasing the carpal ligament. The surgeon makes an incision in the roof of the tunnel itself, sometimes referred to as the“envelope” – enlarging the space and alleviating pressure. Today, this procedure can be performed with a very small incision and a tiny camera (endoscope) that enables the surgeon to see within the space. Your surgeon will utilize specialized instruments, such as Stryker’s KnifeLight instrument, to repair the carpal tunnel surgically.
Be sure to talk with your doctor about the best treatment option for you.
Anticipate feeling better.
Whether your doctor performs an open-release
surgery or less-invasive surgery with an endoscope,
you will likely be able to go home the same day. You
may have a few initial restrictions and be given a
few finger and hand exercises to ensure that your
hand heals properly and functions well. Although
recovery from surgery may take a few weeks,
recurrence of the syndrome after surgery is rare.
One in ten people who undergo surgery to correct
carpal tunnel syndrome choose not to return to
their former job if it involved an activity that may
have been linked to causing or aggravating their
condition. Your doctor can help you determine how
soon after surgery you can resume work.