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Clinical variation in the treatment of trigger finger: An international survey of orthopaedic and plastic surgeons

Authors :
A Dijksterhuis
M.D. Gardiner
R.M. Pinder
J. Debeij
J. Rodrigues
R. Howes
K. Smith
A. Jain
J.H. Coert
E.P.A. van der Heijden
Suresh Madhavan Anandan
Katerina Anesti
Sudhi Ankarath
Shreedhar Aranganathan
Ali Arnaout
Chris Bainbridge
Oreste Basso
Bartlomiej Bednarz
Howard Chu
Ben Dean
Annika Dekker
Edward Donnely
Malik Fleet
Andy Fowler
Michael Gallagher
Zavira Heinze
Juliette Hommes
Anita Jacob
Nikolas Jagodzinsky
Matt Jones
Ankur Khajuria
Liam Kilbane
Preetham Kodumuri
Michal Koziara
Rajin Maahi
David Mather
Helen Mckenna
Tom Murphy
Ashley Newton
Niels Noordzij
Denise Osei-Kuffour
Rob Poulter
Jayanti Rai
Emma Reay
Vasudev Shanbhag
Gillian Smith
Ernst Smits
Anne Spaans
Susan Stevenson
Phil Storey
Paul Stuart
Vi Vien Toh
Ryan Trickett
Ozzie Uhiara
Aarti Velani
Katherine Wensley
Christian West
Neil Wickham
Source :
Journal of Plastic Reconstructive and Aesthetic Surgery, 75, 3628-3651
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

Trigger finger is a common condition affecting the hand. Therapeutic variability surrounds the management of trigger finger, especially in the mild cases. The aim of this study was to survey secondary care surgeons to describe the current management of trigger fingers. The steering group developed a survey for hand surgeons. Following piloting, the survey was distributed to hand surgeons in the United Kingdom and The Netherlands. A total of 713 plastic surgeons and orthopaedic surgeons were invited to participate in the online survey and 440 (62%) surgeons completed the survey. In both mild and moderate cases of trigger finger, steroid injection was the preferred treatment option. Open surgery was the treatment of choice for severe cases. However, there was variation in delivery of care, including type and dosage of steroid, site of injection, interval between injections, maximum number of injections, type of incision and treatment of patients with diabetes or rheumatoid arthritis. This highlights the need for a better evidence base for the treatment of trigger fingers.

Details

ISSN :
17486815
Volume :
75
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Plastic, Reconstructive & Aesthetic Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f2f8d503306b161bb7090d5b19570f68