Muscle disorders are characterized by differential involvement of various muscle groups. Among these, weakness predominantly affecting finger flexors is an uncommon pattern, most frequently found in sporadic inclusion-body myositis. This finding is particularly significant when the full range of histopathological findings of inclusion-body myositis is not found on muscle biopsy. Prominent finger flexor weakness, however, is also observed in other myopathies. It occurs commonly in myotonic dystrophy types 1 and 2. In addition, individual reports and small case series have documented finger flexor weakness in sarcoid and amyloid myopathy, and in inherited myopathies caused by ACTA1, CRYAB, DMD, DYSF, FLNC, GAA, GNE, HNRNPDL, LAMA2, MYH7, and VCP mutations. Therefore, the finding of finger flexor weakness requires consideration of clinical, myopathological, genetic, electrodiagnostic, and sometimes muscle imaging findings to establish a diagnosis. K E Y W O R D S distal myopathy, finger flexor weakness, inclusion-body myositis, myopathy with rimmed vacuoles, myotonic dystrophy 2 | SPORADIC INCLUSION-BODY MYOSITIS sIBM is the most common acquired myopathy after 50 years of age. 3 Its pattern of upper limb muscle involvement has been extensively characterized by both clinical examination and imaging, 4-11 and primarily involves finger flexor muscles. The flexor digitorum profundus (FDP) and flexor pollicis longus are most frequently and most severely affected (Figure 1A,B), with weakness demonstrated in approximately 90% of sIBM patients. 5-7 Within the FDP itself, different fingers can be involved to different degrees. 12 The FDP inserts onto the distal