Cureus. 2025 Mar 21;17(3):e80966. doi: 10.7759/cureus.80966. eCollection 2025 Mar.
ABSTRACT
Pediatric trigger thumb (PTT) is a deformity in the flexion of the thumb due to stenosing tenosynovitis. Surgery is the standard treatment protocol when the thumb is held in fixed flexion after 24 months of age. However, emerging research provides evidence that cases with a fixed deformity can be resolved without surgical management beyond 24 months. The patient, in this case, was a four-year-old female diagnosed with congenital pediatric trigger thumb with early onset in infancy starting at four months. She displayed complete resolution and release of the flexion deformity without surgical treatment at 40 months. It is possible that non-invasive treatment on fixed flexion, such as splinting and observation, extending beyond 24 months before proceeding with surgical intervention should be considered. While the mechanism is only hypothesized, resolution may occur through a combination of tissue remodeling, tendon adaptation, and gradual reduction of the entrapment. Waiting for the potential release of the A1 pulley to occur spontaneously, even in patients with a fixed deformity, may be a successful treatment modality.
PMID:40255769 | PMC:PMC12009635 | DOI:10.7759/cureus.80966