Medications
Medicine is often used to treat symptoms
of
carpal tunnel syndrome. Medicine may relieve swelling,
inflammation, and pain in the wrist or hand. Reducing
swelling in the wrist will relieve pressure on the
median nerve in the carpal tunnel and relieve carpal
tunnel symptoms.
Medication Choices
Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are the
most commonly used medicines for carpal tunnel syndrome. NSAIDs relieve pain
and inflammation and are available with or without a prescription. But a review
of research suggests that NSAID treatment for 2 and 4 weeks may not improve
carpal tunnel symptoms. NSAIDs may be most effective if the tendon is
inflamed.3 Although studies
have not shown NSAIDs to be effective for carpal tunnel syndrome, they may help
relieve your symptoms.
Corticosteroids may be an effective
treatment option when NSAIDs do not effectively relieve pain and
inflammation.3 But corticosteroids are powerful
anti-inflammatory medicines and have side effects that should be considered.
Corticosteroids can be taken in pill form or injected into the wrist by a
doctor.
What To Think About
Medicine should be used with
other measures (such as ice, rest, and splints) to reduce pain and
inflammation.
Corticosteroids:
- Usually are not used until nonsurgical
treatments (such as rest, ice, splints, and anti-inflammatory medicines) have
been tried for several weeks with no improvement.
- Often provide
temporary relief (for several weeks or more). Injected corticosteroids usually
provide longer-lasting results than those taken by mouth (oral), but oral or
injected medicines rarely provide permanent relief from carpal tunnel
symptoms.
- Must be used with caution because both oral and injected
forms have potentially serious side effects.