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14100 Parkway Commons Dr, Suite 100 · Oklahoma City, OK 73134
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Peripheral Nerve Surgery

Carpal Tunnel Release

Surgical decompression of the median nerve at the wrist — one of the most commonly performed and consistently successful outpatient procedures in medicine.

What Is Carpal Tunnel Release?

The carpal tunnel is a narrow passageway on the palm side of your wrist, formed by the wrist bones and the transverse carpal ligament spanning across them. The median nerve — which controls sensation in the thumb, index, middle, and half of the ring finger, and powers the muscles at the base of the thumb — passes through this tunnel alongside nine flexor tendons.

When pressure inside the tunnel rises above a threshold the nerve can tolerate, carpal tunnel syndrome develops: numbness, tingling, night symptoms, and eventually weakness and muscle loss. Carpal tunnel release addresses this by dividing the transverse carpal ligament, expanding the tunnel, and permanently relieving pressure on the nerve.

Releasing the ligament does not cause instability or loss of wrist function. The tunnel widens and eventually fills with scar tissue, but the nerve has permanent room it didn't have before.

Is Surgery the Right Step for You?

Most patients with carpal tunnel syndrome should complete a trial of conservative care before considering surgery. Surgery is appropriate when that trial has failed, when there are objective signs of nerve injury, or when the nerve is at risk of irreversible damage.

✓ Surgery is likely appropriate

  • 6–12 weeks of splinting and activity modification failed
  • Corticosteroid injection gave only temporary relief
  • Nerve conduction study confirms moderate–severe CTS
  • Symptoms are affecting sleep, work, or daily function
  • Numbness is constant rather than positional

⚠ Urgent — nerve at risk

  • Thenar atrophy (thumb base smaller than other hand)
  • Severe slowing or axon loss on nerve conduction studies
  • Constant dense numbness in median nerve distribution
  • Weakness with thumb opposition or pinch

◐ Conservative care first

  • Mild intermittent symptoms, especially nocturnal
  • Symptoms present less than 3–6 months
  • Pregnancy-related carpal tunnel (often resolves)
  • No nerve conduction study yet

Open Carpal Tunnel Release: The Procedure

Open carpal tunnel release is performed through a small incision at the wrist crease, providing direct visualization of the transverse carpal ligament and median nerve throughout the procedure. This well-established technique has decades of outcome data supporting its safety and effectiveness.

What the Procedure Involves

  • Small incision at the wrist crease under local anesthesia
  • Direct visualization of the transverse carpal ligament and median nerve
  • Complete division of the ligament to fully decompress the nerve
  • Procedure typically takes 15–20 minutes
  • Outpatient — you go home the same day
  • No cast; soft dressing allows finger movement immediately

Direct visualization allows the surgeon to confirm complete release and identify anatomical variations safely — the gold standard approach with decades of outcome data.

What to Expect: Recovery Timeline

Carpal tunnel release is an outpatient procedure — you go home the same day. Recovery is predictable for most patients.

Day of surgery
Home the same dayHand is wrapped with a soft dressing, not a cast. Fingers are free to move. Mild soreness at the incision is expected. Elevate the hand when possible to minimize swelling.
Days 3–7
Dressing change and light useDressing is changed or removed. Fingers, hand, and wrist can be used lightly for meals, hygiene, and typing. Avoid gripping, lifting, and getting the incision wet until cleared.
Weeks 1–2
Most light activities resumeSutures out (if non-absorbable). Most patients manage light desk work, driving, and daily activities. Nighttime tingling typically improves early. Grip strength gradually returning.
Weeks 2–6
Progressive return to normal usePillar pain — aching at the base of the palm along the healed ligament — is normal and typically resolves over 6–12 weeks. Grip strength continues to build. Light manual work usually cleared by 3–4 weeks.
Weeks 4–6
Full activity including heavy workHeavy lifting, repetitive gripping, and manual labor typically cleared. Hand therapy may be recommended for patients with pre-existing weakness or those needing faster functional recovery.
3–6 months
Maximum nerve recoveryIn long-standing or severe CTS, nerve healing continues for months after surgery. Sensory recovery typically precedes motor recovery. Most patients reach final outcome by 3–6 months, though dense numbness from severe pre-surgical compression may take longer or remain partially.

Outcomes and What to Expect

Carpal tunnel release is among the most reliably successful procedures in medicine. Roughly 85–95% of patients experience lasting resolution of their primary symptoms — the nighttime waking, numbness, and tingling that are the hallmark of carpal tunnel syndrome.

What the surgery can and cannot do:

  • Numbness and tingling typically improve within the first few weeks of surgery as the nerve decompresses
  • Hand strength recovers fully in most patients without pre-existing muscle atrophy
  • Night symptoms are usually the first to resolve and among the most reliable outcomes
  • Pillar pain (incision soreness at the palm) is temporary and resolves within weeks to months
  • Recurrence after a complete release is uncommon — roughly 5–10% over 10 years
  • Existing thenar muscle atrophy may partially recover, but lost nerve fibers do not fully regenerate — the earlier the surgery, the better the motor recovery
  • Underlying conditions affecting nerve health — diabetes, hypothyroidism, cervical radiculopathy — can limit how much recovery is possible

Workers' Compensation and Carpal Tunnel

Carpal tunnel syndrome is a recognized occupational injury under Oklahoma workers' compensation law when the work history involves repetitive hand and wrist motions, sustained gripping, use of vibrating tools, or prolonged wrist flexion. Occupations commonly involved include assembly line work, data entry, meat processing, construction, dental and hygiene work, and vehicle operation.

We are familiar with workers' compensation cases and can assist with documentation, coordination of authorization, and return-to-work planning. If there is a dispute about causation or the relationship between your work duties and your diagnosis, we recommend consulting a workers' compensation attorney in addition to your medical team.

Patient Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know if I need carpal tunnel surgery?

Surgery becomes appropriate once conservative measures — nighttime wrist splinting, activity modification, and often a corticosteroid injection — have been tried for 6–12 weeks without adequate relief. It moves to a more urgent discussion if you have thenar muscle atrophy (the thumb pad looks flattened), constant numbness that no longer comes and goes, or nerve conduction studies showing severe median nerve slowing or axon loss. Waiting too long when the nerve is actively losing function can limit how much recovery is possible after surgery.

Is carpal tunnel surgery done under general anesthesia?

Most carpal tunnel releases are performed under local anesthesia with light sedation, or a regional nerve block. WALANT (wide-awake local anesthesia no tourniquet) is increasingly used — you are awake throughout with no breathing tube, and you can go home within an hour of the procedure ending. General anesthesia is rarely needed. The procedure itself takes 15–20 minutes.

Will I need physical therapy after surgery?

Most patients recover without formal hand therapy. We typically recommend gentle range-of-motion exercises starting a few days after surgery. Formal occupational or hand therapy is recommended when there is significant pre-existing weakness, thenar muscle atrophy requiring strengthening, or when occupational demands require a structured return-to-work program. Workers' compensation cases often benefit from a therapy-guided return-to-work plan.

Can both hands be operated on at the same time?

Bilateral same-day carpal tunnel release is performed in selected patients when both hands are symptomatic and you have help at home for the first several days. Many surgeons and patients prefer staging the procedures 2–4 weeks apart so one hand is fully functional during the other's recovery. We discuss both options and help you choose based on your living situation, occupation, and the severity of symptoms in each hand.

Why does my palm still hurt weeks after surgery?

Pillar pain — aching or soreness at the base of the palm on either side of the healed ligament — is a normal part of recovery. It is caused by the change in tension on the wrist anatomy after the ligament is divided and the healing process itself. It is not a sign that the surgery failed. Pillar pain typically peaks in the first few weeks and resolves over 6–12 weeks. Gentle massage and desensitization exercises usually help.

What if my symptoms come back after surgery?

True recurrence after a complete release is uncommon — roughly 5–10% over 10 years. When symptoms return, the most common explanations are scar tissue around the nerve at the release site, an incomplete initial release, a second compression site at the forearm or elbow, or progression of underlying conditions affecting nerve health. A repeat nerve conduction study usually clarifies the cause.

How does carpal tunnel relate to problems in the neck?

The median nerve originates from cervical nerve roots C6 and C7. Compression at the neck can mimic or coexist with carpal tunnel syndrome — a situation called "double crush." If there are also neck symptoms, arm weakness, or an ambiguous nerve conduction study, cervical MRI may be part of the evaluation. Treating both compression sites may be necessary for full recovery.

Does Neuroscience Specialists accept workers' compensation cases?

Yes. We have over 35 years of experience treating work-related nerve injuries under Oklahoma's workers' compensation system. Carpal tunnel syndrome is a recognized occupational injury when the work history involves repetitive hand and wrist motions, sustained gripping, or vibrating tool use. We accept WC referrals and provide thorough documentation for case managers and adjusters.

Ready to talk about carpal tunnel release?

Our team evaluates the full picture — wrist, forearm, and cervical spine — to make sure surgery addresses the right problem at the right level.