Carpal tunnel syndrome: long-term nerve conduction studies in 261 hands

OBJECTIVE: To compare a long-term carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) on nerve conduction studies (NCS) in hands treated non-surgically. METHOD: We retrospectively selected 261 symptomatic CTS hands (166 patients), all of them confirmed by NCS. In all cases, at least 2 NCS were performed in an interval gre...

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Main Authors: Hardoim,Dante Guilherme Velasco, Oliveira,Guilherme Bueno de, Kouyoumdjian,João Aris
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Academia Brasileira de Neurologia - ABNEURO 2009
Subjects:
DML
Online Access:http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0004-282X2009000100017
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spelling ftjscielo:oai:scielo:S0004-282X2009000100017 2023-05-15T16:01:44+02:00 Carpal tunnel syndrome: long-term nerve conduction studies in 261 hands Hardoim,Dante Guilherme Velasco Oliveira,Guilherme Bueno de Kouyoumdjian,João Aris 2009-03-01 text/html http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0004-282X2009000100017 en eng Academia Brasileira de Neurologia - ABNEURO Arquivos de Neuro-Psiquiatria v.67 n.1 2009 carpal tunnel syndrome median nerve nerve conduction studies compressive neuropathy long-term electrophysiological evaluation journal article 2009 ftjscielo 2015-10-26T15:59:32Z OBJECTIVE: To compare a long-term carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) on nerve conduction studies (NCS) in hands treated non-surgically. METHOD: We retrospectively selected 261 symptomatic CTS hands (166 patients), all of them confirmed by NCS. In all cases, at least 2 NCS were performed in an interval greater than 12 months. Cases with associated polyneuropathy were excluded. NCS parameters for CTS electrodiagnosis included a sensory conduction velocity (SCV) <46.6 m/s (wrist to index finger, 14 cm) and distal motor latency (DML) >4.25 ms (wrist to APB, 8 cm). RESULTS: 92.8% were women; mean age was 49 years (20-76); the mean interval between NCS was 47 months (12-150). In the first exam, the median sensory nerve action potential (SNAP) and the compound action muscular potential were absent in 9.8% and 1.9%, respectively. In the second/last exam, SCV worsened in 54.2%, remained unchanged in 11.6% and improved in 34.2%. SNAP amplitude worsened in 57.7%, remained unchanged in 13.1% and improved in 29.2%. DML worsened in 52.9%, remained unchanged in 7.6% and improved in 39.5%. Overall, NCS parameters worsened in 54.9%, improved in 34.3% and remained unchanged in 10.8%. CONCLUSION: Long-term changing in NCS of CTS hands apparently were not related to clinical symptomatology and could lead to some difficulty in clinical correlation and prognosis. Aging, male gender and absent SNAP were more related to NCS worsening, regardless the mean interval time between the NCS. Article in Journal/Newspaper DML SciELO Brazil (Scientific Electronic Library Online)
institution Open Polar
collection SciELO Brazil (Scientific Electronic Library Online)
op_collection_id ftjscielo
language English
topic carpal tunnel syndrome
median nerve
nerve conduction studies
compressive neuropathy
long-term electrophysiological evaluation
spellingShingle carpal tunnel syndrome
median nerve
nerve conduction studies
compressive neuropathy
long-term electrophysiological evaluation
Hardoim,Dante Guilherme Velasco
Oliveira,Guilherme Bueno de
Kouyoumdjian,João Aris
Carpal tunnel syndrome: long-term nerve conduction studies in 261 hands
topic_facet carpal tunnel syndrome
median nerve
nerve conduction studies
compressive neuropathy
long-term electrophysiological evaluation
description OBJECTIVE: To compare a long-term carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) on nerve conduction studies (NCS) in hands treated non-surgically. METHOD: We retrospectively selected 261 symptomatic CTS hands (166 patients), all of them confirmed by NCS. In all cases, at least 2 NCS were performed in an interval greater than 12 months. Cases with associated polyneuropathy were excluded. NCS parameters for CTS electrodiagnosis included a sensory conduction velocity (SCV) <46.6 m/s (wrist to index finger, 14 cm) and distal motor latency (DML) >4.25 ms (wrist to APB, 8 cm). RESULTS: 92.8% were women; mean age was 49 years (20-76); the mean interval between NCS was 47 months (12-150). In the first exam, the median sensory nerve action potential (SNAP) and the compound action muscular potential were absent in 9.8% and 1.9%, respectively. In the second/last exam, SCV worsened in 54.2%, remained unchanged in 11.6% and improved in 34.2%. SNAP amplitude worsened in 57.7%, remained unchanged in 13.1% and improved in 29.2%. DML worsened in 52.9%, remained unchanged in 7.6% and improved in 39.5%. Overall, NCS parameters worsened in 54.9%, improved in 34.3% and remained unchanged in 10.8%. CONCLUSION: Long-term changing in NCS of CTS hands apparently were not related to clinical symptomatology and could lead to some difficulty in clinical correlation and prognosis. Aging, male gender and absent SNAP were more related to NCS worsening, regardless the mean interval time between the NCS.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Hardoim,Dante Guilherme Velasco
Oliveira,Guilherme Bueno de
Kouyoumdjian,João Aris
author_facet Hardoim,Dante Guilherme Velasco
Oliveira,Guilherme Bueno de
Kouyoumdjian,João Aris
author_sort Hardoim,Dante Guilherme Velasco
title Carpal tunnel syndrome: long-term nerve conduction studies in 261 hands
title_short Carpal tunnel syndrome: long-term nerve conduction studies in 261 hands
title_full Carpal tunnel syndrome: long-term nerve conduction studies in 261 hands
title_fullStr Carpal tunnel syndrome: long-term nerve conduction studies in 261 hands
title_full_unstemmed Carpal tunnel syndrome: long-term nerve conduction studies in 261 hands
title_sort carpal tunnel syndrome: long-term nerve conduction studies in 261 hands
publisher Academia Brasileira de Neurologia - ABNEURO
publishDate 2009
url http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0004-282X2009000100017
genre DML
genre_facet DML
op_source Arquivos de Neuro-Psiquiatria v.67 n.1 2009
_version_ 1766397479597637632