Trigger Finger Treatment Beaufort, MO

Trigger Finger Treatment Beaufort, MO

In Beaufort, MO, Axes helps treat trigger finger with hand therapy and free injury screenings for pain, stiffness, catching, and locking.

Trigger finger treatment in Beaufort, MO focuses on easing pain, improving stiffness, and helping a catching or locking finger move with more comfort and control.

A finger that sticks or locks can turn small tasks into a daily nuisance. Buttoning clothes, using a phone, gripping a steering wheel, lifting at work, holding a racket, or opening containers may start to require more effort than they should.

At Axes Physical Therapy, our Beaufort, MO hand therapy team checks how your hand moves, where your symptoms show up, and which treatment options may help restore smoother, more dependable hand function.

Through Direct Access Physical Therapy, many patients can start physical therapy without a prescription, and Axes can typically get your first appointment scheduled within 24 to 48 hours after you reach out.

Request an appointment with Axes Physical Therapy, call the location nearest you, or schedule a free injury screening to start your treatment today.

Here’s what we’ll walk through:

  • How trigger finger develops and what signs may mean it is affecting your hand
  • What goes into a trigger finger evaluation
  • Common causes and risk factors
  • Common ways trigger finger is treated based on severity and symptoms
  • How physical therapy, occupational therapy, and hand therapy may support better finger movement
  • How Axes helps patients understand their symptoms and start the right next step

Do not wait to be evaluated if your finger or thumb locks suddenly after an injury, looks deformed, swells severely, or comes with numbness, tingling, or significant weakness.

What Is Happening When You Have Trigger Finger?

Your fingers and thumb bend because tendons glide as your hand moves. Trigger finger, or stenosing tenosynovitis, happens when irritation or thickening keeps that tendon from sliding cleanly through its normal pathway.

Instead of a smooth bend-and-straighten motion, trigger finger can cause catching, popping, clicking, or locking. It may affect one finger, more than one finger, or the thumb, with the thumb and ring finger being the most common spots.

Common symptoms include:

  • Finger stiffness (especially in the morning)
  • A clicking or popping feeling as the finger moves
  • Pain in the palm-side base of the finger or thumb
  • A bump in the palm that may feel sore when pressed
  • A finger or thumb that gets stuck and may need help straightening
  • Problems with everyday hand tasks like holding a pen, gripping a steering wheel, buttoning clothing, or carrying a bag

At first, symptoms may feel minor. A little catching. A little stiffness. A finger that does not glide quite right. But when the finger starts locking, needing help to straighten, or getting in the way of everyday tasks, it becomes much harder to ignore.

How Trigger Finger Is Diagnosed

Trigger finger is most often diagnosed with a physical exam, not a long testing process. A healthcare provider in Beaufort, MO will ask what you are feeling, watch how your finger moves, check where symptoms show up, and look at how catching or locking affects your normal hand use.

To understand what is limiting your hand, your Beaufort, MO hand therapist may assess:

  • Whether your finger or thumb moves smoothly or gets stuck during motion
  • Grip tolerance with tasks like holding tools, lifting objects, or carrying bags
  • Your ability to pinch, hold, and control smaller items
  • Pain or tenderness along the palm side of the affected finger
  • Overall hand function during the tasks that matter most to you
  • Whether limited wrist mobility is changing how your fingers and thumb work
  • The specific activities that make symptoms flare, such as typing, lifting, tool use, cooking, sports, or phone use

Most trigger finger evaluations do not require imaging right away. If your pain, weakness, swelling, numbness, injury history, or movement pattern suggests another issue, your Axes physical therapist in Beaufort, MO can help you understand what needs further evaluation.

Why Does Trigger Finger Happen?

The finger bends and straightens because a flexor tendon moves through a surrounding tendon sheath. When that pathway gets irritated, swollen, or narrowed, the tendon can start catching, clicking, or locking during movement.

Trigger finger can show up after weeks of repeated strain, during periods of stiffness or swelling, or without one clear “that did it” moment. It may be connected to:

  • Repetitive hand use at work, such as gripping power tools, handling equipment, preparing food, carrying supplies, using cleaning tools, or performing hands-on healthcare tasks
  • Hobbies that put repeated stress on the fingers or thumb, such as gardening, golf, tennis, pickleball, crocheting, woodworking, painting, crafting, or playing music
  • Frequent grasping during normal routines, including cooking, cleaning, phone use, computer work, carrying items, opening doors, or holding the wheel during a commute
  • Health conditions that affect tissue irritation or healing, including diabetes and rheumatoid arthritis
  • Stretches of swelling, stiffness, or guarded hand use, especially after several days or weeks of irritation, overuse, or limited movement
  • Past hand pain, overuse, or tendon irritation, even without one clear injury

Trigger finger is not always the same story from one person to the next. Symptoms connected to work tools, sports, computer use, cooking, arthritis, or morning stiffness may each need a slightly different approach.

Treatment Options for Trigger Finger in Beaufort, MO

Treatment usually starts by looking at how much the finger is interfering with your life. If symptoms are mild, conservative care may help calm irritation and improve motion. If the finger keeps locking, pain is worsening, or daily tasks are becoming difficult, your provider may discuss additional options such as an injection or procedure.

Treatment for a catching, painful, or locking finger may include:

  • Activity modification: Finding practical ways to keep using your hand while reducing the motions that make catching, locking, or soreness worse
  • Splinting: Supporting the affected finger so the tendon can settle down without unnecessary catching, bending, or locking
  • Physical therapy, occupational therapy, or hand therapy: A structured approach for improving motion, reducing irritation, protecting the tendon, rebuilding strength when appropriate, and adapting work, home, sports, or hobby tasks
  • Anti-inflammatory medication: Medication may help calm discomfort while other parts of the treatment plan address motion, irritation, and daily hand use
  • Corticosteroid injection: For some cases, a physician-recommended injection may help reduce irritation when symptoms are more persistent
  • Percutaneous release: A minimally invasive procedure used to release the restricted area affecting tendon glide
  • Open surgical release: A surgical procedure used when other treatments are not successful or symptoms are more advanced

For many patients, trigger finger care at Axes starts with understanding how the finger is being irritated, then using physical therapy, occupational therapy, or hand therapy to improve comfort and function. Hand therapy may be especially helpful when symptoms are mild to moderate and the goal is to keep the hand moving well.

Hand Therapy for Trigger Finger in Beaufort, MO

With trigger finger, physical therapy, hand therapy, or occupational therapy can help turn the vague “what do I do with this finger?” problem into a practical plan for movement, symptom control, and better hand use.

Your Beaufort, MO trigger finger care plan at Axes may include a combination of hands-on treatment, guided exercise, splint guidance, and practical activity changes, such as:

  • Trigger finger evaluation: A practical assessment of what your hand can do comfortably, what causes catching or locking, and whether stiffness, swelling, weakness, or mechanics are adding to the problem.
  • Tendon-gliding exercises: Gentle, controlled finger movements designed to help the tendon move more smoothly without cranking through pain or locking.
  • Range-of-motion exercises: Simple, targeted movements for the finger, thumb, hand, and wrist so stiffness does not become the main boss fight.
  • Splinting recommendations: Support for choosing and using a brace or splint that protects the irritated tendon while still keeping the rest of the hand useful.
  • Manual therapy: Targeted techniques for the finger, hand, wrist, or forearm to improve mobility and reduce the stiffness that can make gripping harder.
  • Soft tissue mobilization: Hands-on treatment for muscles, tendons, and surrounding tissue that may feel tight, sore, guarded, or restricted.
  • Dry needling (if appropriate): A treatment option that uses thin needles to target irritated or tense soft tissue that may be affecting hand, wrist, or forearm motion.
  • Grip and pinch strengthening: Progressive strengthening for the hand, fingers, and thumb so daily tasks feel less shaky, painful, or unreliable.
  • Wrist and forearm strengthening: Exercises that help the wrist and forearm share the workload so the irritated finger is not doing every side quest alone.
  • Activity modification: Specific changes to work tasks, tool use, lifting technique, typing setup, phone use, cooking tasks, sports, or hobbies that place extra stress on the affected finger.
  • Pre- and post-surgical rehabilitation: Therapy before or after trigger finger release surgery, including swelling control, scar mobility, range-of-motion exercises, strengthening, and return-to-activity guidance.
  • Home exercise program: Your between-visit roadmap for keeping progress moving, managing symptoms, and avoiding the activities that keep the finger irritated.

Hand therapy is not just about exercises. It is about helping you understand what to do, what to avoid, and how to get back to the tasks that matter at home, at work, and everywhere your hand has to show up.

Why Axes for Trigger Finger Care in Beaufort, MO?

Trigger finger can turn one small part of your hand into the boss level of your day. Axes helps Beaufort, MO patients get answers, treatment, and direction, whether that means beginning hand therapy, adjusting daily activities, using a splint, or coordinating care with another provider.

Patients in Beaufort, MO choose Axes for trigger finger treatment because our care includes:

  • Fast access to care: Axes can typically schedule patients within 24 to 48 hours of initial outreach.
  • Direct access options: Many patients can start physical therapy sooner through direct access, without letting the referral process become a roadblock.
  • Evidence-backed treatment: Your plan is built around clinical reasoning, your specific symptoms, and the way your hand has to work in real life.
  • Collaborative care: When another provider should be involved, we can help coordinate with physicians and specialists so your next step is clearer.
  • Patient-centered care: We focus on practical hand use, helping you move with more comfort, grip with more confidence, and return to the routines and activities that matter most.

If you are not sure whether therapy is the right next step, a free injury screening can help you get a clearer look at your finger pain, stiffness, catching, or locking.

Common Questions About Trigger Finger Treatment in Beaufort, MO

How is trigger finger usually treated?

There is not one best treatment for every case. A finger that catches occasionally may respond to conservative care, while a finger that locks often or limits daily use may need a physician-recommended injection or procedure.

Can hand therapy help trigger finger?

Yes. If repeated gripping, pinching, typing, tool use, sports, or hobbies are irritating the tendon, hand therapy can help identify what is causing symptoms and build a plan to reduce strain.

Do I need a referral for trigger finger therapy?

In many cases, you may be able to start physical therapy without waiting for a referral. Direct Access Physical Therapy can help patients get evaluated sooner, though insurance and condition-specific rules may vary.

When should I suspect trigger finger?

Common signs include clicking, popping, catching, locking, stiffness, or pain when bending or straightening a finger or thumb. You may also feel tenderness or a small bump near the base of the affected finger. To know for sure, you will need a diagnosis from a qualified medical provider or hand therapy specialist.

Will trigger finger improve without treatment?

It depends. Mild stiffness or catching may improve with rest and activity changes, but symptoms can also become more persistent if the tendon continues to be irritated.

When should I get trigger finger checked out?

It is time to schedule care if your finger keeps catching, clicking, locking, stiffening, or hurting, especially if the problem is becoming more frequent or harder to ignore.

Find Trigger Finger Treatment in Beaufort, MO at Axes Physical Therapy

A stiff, painful, or locking finger can make the whole hand feel unreliable. Axes Physical Therapy can help you understand what is causing your symptoms and how to start moving forward.

Ready to have your finger or thumb looked at? Request an appointment online, call the Axes location nearest you, or schedule a free injury screening today.

Services Offered

Services Offered
  • Physical Therapy
    • Pre/Post Surgical Rehabilitation
    • Acute Injury Management
    • Chronic Injury Management
  • Occupational Therapy
    • Certified Hand Therapy
  • Work Conditioning/Hardening
  • Vestibular Therapy and Post-Concussion Rehabilitation
  • Sports Physical Therapy
  • Trigger Point Dry Needling
  • Pediatric Orthopedic Physical Therapy
  • Geriatric Orthopedic Physical Therapy
  • Instrument Assisted Soft Tissue Mobilization (IASTYM)
  • Spine Specialty – Manual Therapy Certified
  • Free Injury Screenings
  • Kinesio Taping®
  • Blood Flow Restriction Therapy

Our Team

Stephen Brunjes
OTR/L, CEAS
Brad Tiehes
PT, DPT, CMPT
Sharon Titter
Clinic Director
Megan Henderson
OTR/L, CHT
Regina Rahmberg
Front Office
Anna Skornia
Front Office

Locations

Begin Your Recovery Today

Injuries and pain shouldn’t keep you from moving and doing the things you love.