Cubital Tunnel Syndrome Treatment in Raleigh, NC
Cubital Tunnel Syndrome Treatment in Raleigh, NC
Ring and little finger numbness, tingling, or weakness — especially when the elbow is bent? Cubital tunnel syndrome is the second most common nerve compression in the body, and very treatable before permanent nerve damage occurs.
What Is Cubital Tunnel Syndrome?
Cubital tunnel syndrome occurs when the ulnar nerve is compressed or irritated as it passes through the cubital tunnel on the inner side of the elbow. The ulnar nerve controls sensation in the ring and little fingers and powers the intrinsic muscles of the hand — the muscles responsible for fine motor coordination and grip strength.
The elbow flexion position stretches and compresses the ulnar nerve — which is why symptoms are worst when the elbow is bent for prolonged periods (sleeping with arm bent, driving, talking on the phone). Like carpal tunnel syndrome, prolonged untreated compression causes permanent nerve damage and intrinsic muscle wasting.
ⓘ Early treatment is critical. Intrinsic muscle wasting (the small hand muscles) from ulnar nerve compression can be permanent. Advanced cubital tunnel syndrome with significant muscle loss does not fully recover even after surgery.
Risk Factors
Several factors increase the likelihood of developing this condition.
Sleeping with Elbow Bent
Most common exacerbating factor
Prolonged Phone Use
Elbow flexion for extended periods
Leaning on Elbow
Pressure on cubital tunnel
Prior Elbow Fracture
Scar tissue or deformity compresses nerve
Elbow Arthritis
Bone spurs narrow the tunnel
Throwing Athletes
Repetitive valgus stress at elbow
Stages of Cubital Tunnel Syndrome
Intermittent numbness/tingling. Normal intrinsic strength. Good prognosis.
Frequent symptoms. Mild intrinsic weakness. Nerve slowing on NCS.
Constant numbness. Significant muscle wasting. Clawing of fingers.
Diagnosis
Cubital tunnel syndrome is diagnosed with the elbow flexion test (symptoms reproduce at 1 minute of full elbow flexion), Tinel's sign at the cubital tunnel, and nerve conduction studies (NCS/EMG) confirming ulnar nerve slowing at the elbow.
- ✓Elbow flexion test (1 minute of full flexion)
- ✓Tinel's sign at cubital tunnel
- ✓Intrinsic muscle strength assessment
- ✓Nerve conduction studies / EMG
- ✓Assessment for concurrent medial epicondylitis
Treatment Outcomes & Statistics
Published outcome data to help you make an informed decision.
Mild cubital tunnel often responds to splinting and activity modification
Elbow extension splint prevents overnight nerve compression — simple and effective
Moderate-severe cases typically require surgery for lasting relief
Padding the elbow and avoiding leaning reduces daytime compression
Complication Profile
| Complication | Rate | Severity | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Disease progression if untreated | Common | Serious | Moderate/severe cases worsen — permanent intrinsic weakness |
| Splint compliance issues | Common | Minor | Night splinting requires consistent use |
Source: Dellon et al., Muscle Nerve; Mowlavi et al., Plast Reconstr Surg
After in-situ decompression or transposition
Numbness and tingling improve significantly in most patients
Intrinsic muscle recovery incomplete in advanced cases — early surgery critical
Most patients return to desk work within 1–2 weeks
Complication Profile
| Complication | Rate | Severity | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Medial antebrachial nerve irritation | 10–15% | Minor | Temporary numbness along inner forearm; usually resolves |
| Incomplete recovery (severe cases) | 30% | Moderate | Intrinsic muscle wasting may be permanent |
| Elbow stiffness | 5% | Minor | Addressed with therapy |
| Infection | <1% | Minor | Very rare |
Source: Zlowodzki et al., J Hand Surg 2007; Macadam et al., Plast Reconstr Surg 2008
Treatment Options
Dr. Chambers will recommend the best approach based on your severity, goals, and lifestyle.
Elbow Extension Night Splint
A splint that prevents elbow bending during sleep reduces overnight nerve compression — the most damaging position. Simple, inexpensive, and effective for mild cubital tunnel syndrome. Often combined with activity modification (no leaning on elbow, limit phone use with elbow bent).
In-Situ Decompression
The tissue compressing the ulnar nerve at the cubital tunnel is released without moving the nerve. Quick, effective procedure for mild-moderate cases where the nerve does not sublux (snap) out of the groove.
Ulnar Nerve Transposition
The ulnar nerve is moved from behind the elbow to in front of it (anterior transposition) — eliminating the stretch that occurs with elbow flexion. Preferred for cases with nerve subluxation, revision surgery, or significant bony deformity.
What to Expect During Recovery
Post-Op Recovery
Padded dressing on elbow. Arm sling optional. Hand and wrist motion permitted immediately.
Wound Healing
Sutures removed at 10–14 days. Gradual return to elbow range of motion. Return to desk work.
Strengthening
Progressive grip and elbow strengthening. Return to most activities without heavy lifting.
Nerve Recovery
Numbness and tingling gradually improve. Intrinsic muscle strength recovers over 3–6 months in mild-moderate cases.
Frequently Asked Questions
The key difference is which fingers are numb. Carpal tunnel affects the thumb, index, and middle fingers (median nerve). Cubital tunnel affects the ring and little fingers (ulnar nerve). Carpal tunnel is worse at night with wrist flexion; cubital tunnel is worse with elbow bending. Nerve conduction studies distinguish them definitively.
Mild cases often improve significantly with night splinting and avoiding prolonged elbow flexion. Moderate-severe cases typically do not fully resolve without surgery and may worsen — causing permanent intrinsic muscle damage. This is why early treatment is important.
Sensory recovery (numbness and tingling) is excellent in most cases. Motor recovery depends on severity — mild-moderate cases recover fully. Advanced cases with significant intrinsic muscle wasting may have incomplete motor recovery even after successful surgery. This is the strongest argument for not delaying treatment.
No referral is needed. Dr. Chambers accepts patients directly at all four Triangle locations. Nerve conduction studies can be ordered at your first visit.
Related Conditions & Resources
Numb Ring and Little Fingers? Get Evaluated Today.
Cubital tunnel syndrome is very treatable. Delays risk permanent nerve damage. No referral needed.
Stephen Chambers, M.D.
Dual Board-Certified Hand & Upper Extremity Surgeon · Raleigh Orthopaedic










