After a traumatic fracture of the finger, even after treatment, it may have an impact on motor sensation and other functions, so it is recommended to go to the physical rehabilitation department of a regular medical institution for professional rehabilitation exercises. We recommend that you do more finger flexion and extension exercises and use your injured hand to hold a cup or make a fist or ball. After the surgical wound is healed, if there are other symptoms such as pain, swelling, stiffness of the joint and difficulty in extension and flexion, you can also continue the treatment with the external application of Chinese herbal medicine to relieve swelling and pain, soothe the tendons and activate the blood, and connect the bones. For stiffness of the joint, external treatment with blood circulation, swelling, pain relieving, tendon and bone jointing herbs, plus appropriate bending exercises. Early functional exercises are sometimes accompanied by pain, but early exercises are often twice as effective. Do not try to wait until the fracture is healed and the cast or splint is removed before you “feel comfortable” with active and passive extension and flexion of the finger. Most patients with intra-articular fractures involving the articular surface will have varying degrees of dysfunction, and it is best to surgically reposition the fracture for internal fixation with steel pins to allow for early functional exercises, reduce tissue adhesions, and maximize restoration of finger function.