⚠️ CRITICAL INFORMATION FOR TRIGGER FINGER SUFFERERS

You Woke Up With Locked Fingers.
Again..

Your cortisone shot worked for 3 months. The splint was unbearable. Now your doctor says "surgery or nothing." But nobody's telling you these 7 truths that could save you $3,000 and 6 months of recovery.

51%

 

Cortisone Fails
Within 12 Months

4-6

 

Months Recovery
Post-Surgery

$3000

 

Average Surgery
Cost (USA)

If you're reading this, you've probably tried everything: the cortisone that worked for a few months before the problem returned, the splint you couldn't tolerate for the required 6-9 weeks, the exercises that seemed useless.

 

And now your doctor is saying "if it doesn't improve, you'll need surgery."

 

But nobody is telling you the 7 hidden truths about trigger finger that completely change your treatment strategy. Here's what you need to know before you make any other decision.

GET INSTANT RELIEF TODAY

7 Trigger Finger TRUTHS
That Change Everything

Based on medical research and testimonials from 200.000+ patients

morning locking gets worse every week (and you have only a small window to act)

That annoying "click" you ignored for months? That's your flexor tendon thickening inside the A1 pulley. Every day that passes, that pulley constricts more, the tendon inflames more, and the problem escalates from "annoying" to "disabling."

I woke one morning with my two middle fingers stuck down & unable to open them at all. Had to force them open with my other hand.

 

- Patient, Age 52

The Medical Truth:

 

That annoying "click" you ignored for months? That's your flexor tendon thickening inside the A1 pulley. Every day that passes, that pulley constricts more, the tendon inflames more, and the problem escalates from "annoying" to "disabling."

Once you reach the "fixed flexion" stage, the finger can't be straightened even with surgery. The window for conservative treatment is closing right now.

cortisone is a temporary band-aid (with a very specific expiration date)

Your orthopedist told you cortisone "works in 66-82% of cases." But what they didn't tell you:

51% of patients fail within 12 months

 

of injection. 84% of these failures occur in the first 3 months.

The cortisone injection was unbearably painful. It worked for about 6 months, and now my thumb is starting to lock again. Grrrr.

 

- Forum patient

Worse: each successive injection has a lower success rate, and doctors limit injections to maximum 3 per year due to risk of tendon weakening. You're literally running out of options.

 

For diabetics: Cortisone failure rate skyrockets, and the injection can spike blood sugar for days.

splinting works... but only if you endure it for 6-9 weeks (and 60% can't)

Studies show nighttime splinting has a 60% success rate — IF you wear it consistently for 6-9 weeks. The problem? Most people can't complete the protocol.

The physical therapist made me a splint. Never wore it because sleeping in it was a definite no.

 

- Forum patient

The splint is uncomfortable, disrupts sleep, and completely immobilizes the finger. For those who work with their hands (musicians, craftspeople, typists, nurses), wearing it during the day is impossible. And if you've had symptoms for more than 6 months, splinting alone won't eliminate triggering according to clinical studies.

The Real Problem:

 

The splint keeps your finger straight but doesn't treat the underlying cause (inflammation and thickening of the A1 pulley). It's a passive solution for an active problem.

your work and hobbies are in real danger (and time is running out)

For many, trigger finger isn't just a nuisance — it's an existential threat to identity and income.

I was studying classical guitar. It affected my finger picking pretty badly... had to stop playing completely.

 

- Musician, Age 28

As a nurse, this affects my work daily. Started wondering how much longer I could keep working like this.

 

- Nurse, Age 45

Guitarists. Pianists. Craftspeople. Typists. Surgeons. Factory workers. The loss isn't just functional — it's emotional, financial, and tied to identity. And every day the problem worsens, that window to save what you love narrows.

Impact Statistics:

 

- 34% of chronic sufferers report work performance "significantly compromised"

 

- 36% say sex life has suffered

 

- 35% report recreational activities limited

it's spreading to other fingers (because the problem is systemic, not local)

Think it only affects one finger? Think again. More than 25% of patients develop trigger finger in multiple digits.

Throughout 2 years I've experienced trigger finger in EVERY finger. My hand physician gave me a cortisone shot for each one.

 

- Patient, Forum

Why? Because the underlying causes (repetitive movements, diabetes, arthritis, systemic inflammation) don't only affect one hand. If you have trigger finger in your right ring finger, there's a high probability your middle finger, thumb, or left hand digits are next.

Most Common Spread Pattern:

 

- Ring finger (28%)

- Thumb (25%)

- Middle finger (22%)

- Pinky (8%)

- Index finger (7%)

Treating only the symptomatic finger without addressing the system is like putting out a fire in one room while others are already burning.

surgery has a 4-6 month recovery (and complications nobody tells you about)

"If cortisone doesn't work, you'll need surgery." Sounds simple, right? But here's what they're not telling you:

Actual Recovery Timeline:

 

- 10-14 days: Remove stitches

 

- 2 months: Continued tenderness

 

- 4-6 months: Full strength and mobility recovery

 

- Some patients: 3+ years for complete recovery

Unfortunately, about 3 years for recovery. She was a climber — was off for about six months.

 

- Patient, Forum

Then there are complications: infection, nerve damage, tendon damage, and in some cases, inability to straighten the affected finger even after surgery. Surgery solves the problem in most cases, but it's not the "quick and easy" solution presented.

 

Cost: $2,000-5,000+ depending on insurance, plus lost work days.

every day you wait, the a1 pulley thickens permanently (and surgery becomes inevitable)

Here's the truth nobody tells you clearly: trigger finger doesn't "get better on its own." In one study, only 52% of patients had complete resolution after an average of 8 months without treatment. And that 48% who didn't improve? Many developed permanent flexion.

The Medical Reality:

 

Every time your finger locks, inflammation worsens. Every day of inflammation, the A1 pulley becomes more fibrotic (scarred and thickened). The thicker it gets, the harder conservative treatment becomes.

Conservative (non-surgical) treatment works BEST in early stages. Once the pulley is severely thickened, surgery becomes the only option.

Tendons don't give a warning... one day it's there. Then it gets worse. My doctor says if it doesn't improve I'll need surgery.

 

- Patient, Age 51

The message is clear: The best time to act was 6 months ago. The second-best time is right now, before the window for conservative treatment closes completely.

There's a Better Alternative

Neurivo Hand Massager delivers clinical-grade compression therapy + rapid Infrared heat to release trapped tendons and reduce inflammation at the source — in just 15 minutes, without needles, without surgery, without the 6-9 week wait.

 

While cortisone masks symptoms temporarily and splints passively immobilize, Neurivo actively treats the A1 pulley constriction with targeted compression that mimics professional hand therapy — from your home, on your schedule.

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There's a Better Alternative

Neurivo Hand Massager delivers clinical-grade compression therapy + rapid heat to release trapped tendons and reduce inflammation at the source — in just 15 minutes, without needles, without surgery, without the 6-9 week wait.

 

While cortisone masks symptoms temporarily and splints passively immobilize, Neurivo actively treats the A1 pulley constriction with targeted compression that mimics professional hand therapy — from your home, on your schedule.

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