The common clinical causes of numbness of the middle finger include inadvertent pressure on the finger, cold and other physiological causes, as well as cervical spondylosis, carpal tunnel syndrome and other pathological factors.
1. Physiological factors: If some people inadvertently compress the middle finger while sleeping or in cold weather, the blood circulation of the middle finger will be impaired, resulting in ischemia, numbness and pain at the end of the finger. This situation can be relieved after appropriate relaxation or good warmth measures.
2. Pathological factors: cervical spondylosis is the most common cause of numbness of the fingers, the sick population of the spinal cord and nerve roots by the spine in a protruding state of compression, clinical manifestations of numbness in the limbs and radiating pain.
There are also people with carpal tunnel syndrome, whose median nerve is squeezed in the carpal tunnel and peripheral nerve compression syndrome occurs, with clinical manifestations of numbness and weakness of the hand and pain in the anterior part of the wrist; numbness of the fingers is most common in the thumb, forefinger, middle finger and other areas where the median nerve is distributed.
If the numbness of the middle finger persists, it is recommended to go to the neurosurgery department of the hospital for treatment.