Condition · Nerve Pain

Nerve entrapment.
Localize the entrapment. Release it.

A peripheral nerve compressed at a specific anatomic location — carpal tunnel, cubital tunnel, tarsal tunnel, others — generates pain, numbness, and weakness in that nerve's distribution.

Who It's For

If this is you, we can help.

Pain, numbness, or weakness in the distribution of a specific peripheral nerve. Often with positional or activity-related triggers. Sometimes a specific point of tenderness or a positive Tinel sign at the entrapment site.

What to Expect

Your first visit.

Focused examination identifying the involved nerve and likely entrapment site. EMG/NCS to confirm. Diagnostic ultrasound when indicated. A staged plan from conservative through interventional through surgical referral.

Treatment Options

A targeted plan for a targeted problem.

Activity modification, splinting, and PT for early or mild cases. Ultrasound-guided perineural corticosteroid injection or hydrodissection for confirmed entrapments. Surgical referral for refractory or severe cases. Peripheral nerve stimulation for selected post-decompression pain.

Stop accepting the downtime.

A precise diagnosis is the start of every recovery. Schedule a consultation at any Triumph location.