Overview
The median nerve passes through a narrow corridor at the base of your palm called the carpal tunnel. The roof of that corridor is a tough fibrous band — the transverse carpal ligament. When pressure rises inside the tunnel (from swelling of the surrounding tendons, fluid retention, or simply tight natural anatomy), the nerve gets squeezed. The classic symptoms are numbness and tingling in the thumb, index, middle, and the thumb-side half of the ring finger. Pain and tingling at night that wake you up — and the urge to shake out the hand to relieve it — is the hallmark of carpal tunnel syndrome.
How the Procedure Works
The choice between open and endoscopic release depends on anatomy and surgeon preference — both reliably decompress the nerve when done correctly. With an open approach we make a small incision in the palm, identify the transverse carpal ligament under direct vision, and divide it completely from distal to proximal, protecting the palmar cutaneous branch of the median nerve and the recurrent motor branch that swings back to the thenar muscles. Incomplete release is the most common reason symptoms persist, so we confirm the entire ligament is divided before closing. With an endoscopic release, a cannula is passed through a single wrist-crease portal and the ligament is cut from underneath using a camera for visualization — smaller scar, often slightly faster grip recovery, same decompression result. Numbness in the fingers typically begins improving early in recovery; thenar weakness and atrophy recover more slowly, if at all, because nerve regeneration is a gradual process.
When to Consider Carpal Tunnel Release
Carpal tunnel release is generally offered when symptoms, imaging, and a trial of non-operative care together point to surgery as the next step. The typical picture includes:
Median nerve symptoms
Numbness, tingling, and night symptoms in the median nerve distribution of the hand.
Failed conservative care
Night splinting, activity modification, and a corticosteroid injection that has not produced lasting relief.
Electrodiagnostic confirmation
A nerve conduction study confirming median neuropathy at the wrist.
Conditions This Treats
Physicians Who Perform Carpal Tunnel Release
Providers Who Surgically Assist with Carpal Tunnel Release
Risks & Why We Still Recommend It
Every operation carries risk. The reason we offer this procedure is that the condition, left untreated, causes worsening nerve compression that eventually produces fixed numbness, thenar atrophy, and a weak pinch that doesn't recover even after late release. That is the trade we are managing — not eliminating risk, but choosing the smaller of two unfavorable trajectories.
The risks we discuss with you before carpal tunnel release include:
- bleeding and infection
- anesthesia risk (most cases are local/MAC, which shifts the risk profile)
- pillar pain at the palm for a period
- scar tenderness
- incomplete release requiring revision
- injury to the median nerve or its recurrent motor branch (rare)
The indication to proceed is clinically and electrodiagnostically confirmed carpal tunnel syndrome that has not responded to splinting and activity modification. Patients who don't need this operation don't get it.
Further Reading
External patient-education references and related OSI pages for additional background:





