A significant portion of the U.S. population will contract wrist or hand arthritis in their lifetimes. Countless more suffer from hand or wrist instability without reporting it or seeking treatment. Carpal tunnel syndrome affects many people between 45 and 64 years old. Trigger finger, like carpal tunnel, is a repetitive strain injury. All these injuries can be helped with stem cell therapy.
You have 206 bones in your body, and 54 of them are in your hands. An additional 52 are in your feet, but that’s a different topic. With so many bones, tendons, muscles and supporting tissues, the danger of injury increases. That’s why you must take care of your hands and wrists. Keep them healthy and you can be productive at whatever you do.
If you suffer from hand arthritis, instability, carpal tunnel syndrome or trigger finger, seek the advice of your family physician or a top NYC stem cell therapy specialist. If you have a triangular fibrocartilage complex or TFCC tear, you can get relief from a number of advanced, minimally invasive procedures like stem cell therapy.
Dealing with Painful Hand Arthritis
Injuries and medical conditions can incapacitate your hands. Hand arthritis is characterized by an inflamed joint. It can affect any joint in your hand or wrist. Arthritis usually comes on gradually; it may begin as mild stiffness or occasional pain, but as it progresses, it becomes very painful and debilitating. It’s caused by either:
- The cartilage between the bones of the joint wears away, a condition called osteoarthritis.
- Your immune system erroneously attacks the lining of the joint, a condition called rheumatoid arthritis.
Both conditions lead to pain, inflammation and stiffness. The most commonly suggested treatments are medications, physical therapy and surgery, but none of these work in every case. Stem cell therapy for arthritis and stem cell therapy for osteoarthritis offer the promise of not just easing your pain, but the treatment may even restore some flexibility to your affected hands.
Carpal Tunnel Syndrome and Trigger Finger
These two conditions are related in that both are considered repetitive strain injuries of your hand and wrist. Both also affect the nerves that flow into your hand. Carpal tunnel syndrome and trigger finger are caused by a number of different conditions, including:
- Injuries that didn’t heal correctly
- Inflammation, including from rheumatoid arthritis
- Any factor that impinges the nerve
Carpal tunnel syndrome results in a tingling sensation or numbness from your wrist to your fingers. Its symptoms appear when you’re using your hands in a repetitive motion, such as typing. Trigger finger affects one or more of your fingers and can lead to stiffness or popping. If you have trigger finger, you may not be able to straighten the digit.
Check with your doctor about treatment, but ask if you’re a good candidate for stem cell therapy. As an alternative to surgery or medications, a stem cell treatment works from the inside out to deliver stem cells taken from your own bone marrow. Immature stem cells can become ligament cells, bone cells, nerve cells or whatever your body needs to correct the problem and ease your pain.
Solutions to Wrist Instability
After an accident, injury or surgery, your wrist may feel unsteady, as if you don’t have the strength you used to have. This instability can be caused by several different conditions. With eight bones and eight ligaments in your wrist, the movements of your wrist depend on everything working together properly. If even one of the small bones slips out of position, it can limit your flexibility.
As a result, you may feel pain or experience limited movement from the instability. Physical therapy, steroid injections and even surgery can help, but the condition invariably leads to the onset of arthritis. Instead of those traditional treatment options, consider regenerative therapy. Using your own stem cells, this procedure can heal your instability from the inside. Stem cells are injected into your wrist, where they work to rebuild the damage while reducing the pain and inflammation.
TFCC Tears Don’t Respond Well to Surgery
Your triangular fibrocartilage complex, or TFCC, is the ligament — or thick, fibrous tissue — that connects the ulna bone in your forearm to the bones in your hand. The TFCC ligament stabilizes your wrist on the lateral or pinky finger side while supporting your forearm bones. Like all ligaments in your body, it’s usually difficult to damage.
But if you do suffer an injury that results in a TFCC tear, you feel it immediately. Your wrist swells up, and it hurts every time you move it. Most family doctors may recommend that you visit a surgeon, as torn ligaments don’t heal on their own. But surgery isn’t always the best solution. Even when performed by one of the best Brooklyn NYC doctors, it can still leave you with long-term pain and limitation in your wrist’s flexibility.
Depending on the extent and location of your tear, you may benefit from less invasive, more advanced treatments. Talk to a leading stem cell specialist in New York like Dr. Leon Reyfman. He can guide you toward the most effective treatment for your particular case, such as:
- Platelet rich plasma injections
- Prolotherapy
- Stem cell therapy
Get the Best Care
When you feel pain, stiffness or tingling in your wrist or hand, it’s often a sign of ligament or nerve damage. Before you opt for surgery, give yourself more treatment options by asking about stem cell therapy. This proven, minimally invasive medical procedure can heal bones, ligaments, tendons and soft tissue in your hands and wrists, even if you suffer from:
- Hand arthritis
- Wrist instability
- Carpal tunnel syndrome
- Trigger finger
- TFCC tear
Additionally, procedures like plasma rich platelet injections and prolotherapy have minimal downtime, getting you back to your normal life quickly while you continue to heal. Research in the medical use of stem cells is ongoing, but using your own body’s natural healing process offers a bright future. Talk to your NYC doctor or a stem cell specialist about your hand and wrist injury.
Dr. Leon Reyfman, MD, RPh, , $$,
New York, NY 10010
☎ (212) 612-2222
Dr. Leon Reyfman, MD, RPh, , $$,
Brooklyn, NY 11223
☎(718) 488-0188
Dr. Leon Reyfman, MD, RPh, , $$,
Astoria, NY 11105
☎(718) 998-9880