Knackered finger

Author
Discussion

Baryonyx

Original Poster:

18,075 posts

171 months

Tuesday 31st March 2015
quotequote all
Not me, but the wife.

About a month ago, my wife was playing netball (stupid sport) and was struck in the hand by another player whilst making a catch. She complained of pain in her right hand little finger at the time and said it was sore to bend it straight (she couldn't straighten it by herself). The injury pertains to the first joint, at the end. Now, it's healed, in a sense, but her finger is permanently bent at the end and she can't straighten it without bending the tip back with her other hand. When he does this, it's sore and she's complained these past few days of catching her hand on things and bending the finger back, causing pain.

I told her she should have splinted it at the time and that permanent damage like this was a likely outcome. Can it be fixed now that it's healed, will it ever go straight again? Why does this happen, I presume the tendon is now too weak to pull it straight?

tyrone1973

59 posts

222 months

Tuesday 31st March 2015
quotequote all
Sounds like a mallet finger injury.
Can still be treated attend local ED and it will be put in a mallet splint (held in full extension).
When reviewed either orthopaedics or plastics can decide whether to try conservative(splint only) or go straight to operative repair.

hajaba123

1,319 posts

187 months

Tuesday 31st March 2015
quotequote all
wot 'e said!

He's an ED consultant so sees a few, I play rugby and have had a few.

numtumfutunch

4,929 posts

150 months

Wednesday 1st April 2015
quotequote all

Your missus needs to see a real doc not an internet one

(Apols to Tyrone1973)

jinkster

2,335 posts

168 months

Friday 13th December 2024
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Sorry for bringing up an old thread.

I've got 2 mallet fingers - was cleaning the car and it happened - didn't think much of it and used the other hand. Now got both middles in extended splints!

Absolute PITA!

The_Doc

5,376 posts

232 months

Sunday 15th December 2024
quotequote all
You've got to get to A&E for a mallet splint soon on these. Eg 48 hrs
Late splinting equals worse outcome.
Easy to treat early. Slow to heal.

Ignore=floppy finger tip for ever.

jinkster

2,335 posts

168 months

Monday 16th December 2024
quotequote all
The_Doc said:
You've got to get to A&E for a mallet splint soon on these. Eg 48 hrs
Late splinting equals worse outcome.
Easy to treat early. Slow to heal.

Ignore=floppy finger tip for ever.
I was down at the hospital within half an hour of it happening (X-ray and raised splint added - no broken bone). Biggest problem is changing the dressing after showering. I always feel as though the finger bends when readjusting the bandage - will this hinder progress? Heading back to the hospital just before Christmas for them to check up on it.


The_Doc

5,376 posts

232 months

Monday 16th December 2024
quotequote all
The mallet splint never comes off.
If it comes off and the finger tip droops you're back to square one.
If you take it off you must support the finger tip fully on a table top or counter top.

jinkster

2,335 posts

168 months

Tuesday 24th December 2024
quotequote all
The_Doc said:
The mallet splint never comes off.
If it comes off and the finger tip droops you're back to square one.
If you take it off you must support the finger tip fully on a table top or counter top.
Thank you. I was in the hospital a couple of days ago. Ive been told another 4 weeks until the splints come off - that will take it to 6 weeks total. The finger seems to start to stiffen up now so hopefully the tendon is fixing itself. I've bought some finger cots to keep it dry which will help in the shower!

drmike37

543 posts

68 months

Tuesday 24th December 2024
quotequote all
Mallet finger.
Best treated soon after injury, but still worth trying splinting at a month. Success rate decreases with time, however.
Needs an xray to determine if bony or soft tissue injury, and if bony whether joint is congruent and stable. Treatment is surgical if joint not stable. If joint ok then best treatment is with splints custom made by hand therapists.
If you leave it the deformity will be permanent. Will probably develop a swan neck deformity later. If this happens then fusing the distal joint can help.

Hoofy

78,287 posts

294 months

Wednesday 25th December 2024
quotequote all
The pros above are all correct!

I have/had this about 10 years ago. Fortunately, I went to A&E that day and it's fine now although that joint is a little bigger. In fact, I'd forgotten I had this until this thread popped up. But as mentioned above, don't remove the splint until told to! If you remove the bandage, rest it on a table.

The funny bit was at physio after it had healed when he asked me to bend my finger. It had been straight for 6 weeks and I just couldn't remember how to bend it. I had to bend it with the help of the other hand. biggrin

As an aside, I was still able to play tennis and badminton. I just learnt to play with my left hand. After I started playing properly again, I remember sometimes switching hands so I didn't need to do a backhand. Overhead strikes with the left hand were a bit wayward, mind. The number of times the shuttle landed on my head... hehe

I can't remember how long it was before I was back to progressive strength training but I've not had problems with that finger when lifting heavy. Obviously at the time, I struggled to pick up anything mildly heavy without pain (like a cup of tea!), but now it's completely fine for heavy lifting.

Edited by Hoofy on Wednesday 25th December 00:39

jinkster

2,335 posts

168 months

Friday 27th December 2024
quotequote all
Thanks for all the replies. I’ve left the splint on and I can feel the tendon starting to work again when I try and move the end of my finger. The splint comes off towards the end of Jan!

jinkster

2,335 posts

168 months

Monday 17th February
quotequote all
jinkster said:
Thanks for all the replies. I’ve left the splint on and I can feel the tendon starting to work again when I try and move the end of my finger. The splint comes off towards the end of Jan!
Now weaning the splint off. Taking time and finger very stiff and the skin quite sensitive to touch. Worried about doing it again but small easy steps...

Hoofy

78,287 posts

294 months

Tuesday 18th February
quotequote all
Phew. Yes, I was careful as it was a bit tender. Rightly or wrongly, I wondered if it would be weaker so easier to re-break it where it healed so was careful for quite a while after. I kept an old splint in the car just in case. Better safe than sorry!

ozzuk

1,282 posts

139 months

Tuesday 18th February
quotequote all
Will you be able to play the piano after this type of injury?


Hoofy

78,287 posts

294 months

Tuesday 18th February
quotequote all
ozzuk said:
Will you be able to play the piano after this type of injury?
I certainly can but I was never a pro before...