We evaluated the natural history of median nerve sensory conduction, hand/wrist symptoms, and carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) in an 11-year longitudinal study of 289 workers from four industries. Twenty hands which had carpal tunnel release surgery were excluded, leaving 558 hands for the primary study
Relationships between clinical symptom severity scales and nerve conduction measures in carpal tunnel syndrome
โ Scribed by Heecheon You; Zachary Simmons; Andris Freivalds; Milind J. Kothari; Sanjiv H. Naidu
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 80 KB
- Volume
- 22
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0148-639X
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โฆ Synopsis
This study examined the severity of symptoms in carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) in relation to nerve conduction measures of the median nerve. Clinical symptom severity and nerve conduction studies were evaluated for 64 hands with CTS in 45 patients. We found the following: (1) significant relationships identified among the clinical scales resulted in a dichotomous symptom classification scheme into primary and secondary symptoms, with the former being more specific for those symptoms usually seen in association with nerve injury; (2) there were significant relationships between symptom severity and nerve conduction abnormality; (3) the primary symptom scale correlated more strongly with the electrodiagnostic measures of nerve injury than did the secondary symptom scale. Based on these findings, we believe that these clinical scales have biological significance and reflect median nerve injury. This would support their potential utility for evaluating the outcome of CTS treatment and developing a model for exposure-severity relationship.
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