Volume Effect of Nerve Hydrodissection for Carpal Tunnel Syndrome

Author:

Huang Chien‐Yao1,Lai Chia‐Ying1,Reeves Kenneth Dean2,Lam King Hei Stanley3456ORCID,Li Tsung‐Ying17,Cheng Chin‐I8,Wu Yung‐Tsan179ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Tri‐Service General Hospital, School of Medicine National Defense Medical Centers Taipei Taiwan

2. Private Practice PM&R and Pain Management Roeland Park KS USA

3. The Hong Kong Institute of Musculoskeletal Medicine Hong Kong

4. Department of Family Medicine The Chinese University of Hong Kong Hong Kong

5. Department of Family Medicine The University of Hong Kong Hong Kong

6. Center for Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine Chung Shan Medical University Hospital Taichung Taiwan

7. Integrated Pain Management Center, Tri‐Service General Hospital, School of Medicine National Defense Medical Center Taipei Taiwan

8. Department of Statistics, Actuarial and Data Science Central Michigan University Mt. Pleasant MI USA

9. Department of Research and Development, School of Medicine National Defense Medical Center Taipei Taiwan

Abstract

ObjectivesThis study compared ultrasound‐guided nerve hydrodissection (HD) outcomes using two commonly used injectate volumes (10 and 5 mL) of normal saline to explore if there is a volume effect of HD for patients with moderate carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS).MethodsTwenty‐four participants were randomly assigned to treatment with HD using ultrasound‐guidance and either 10 mL or 5 mL of normal saline (HD‐10 and HD‐5 groups respectively). Our primary outcome measures were the change scores of the two subscales of the Boston Carpal Tunnel Syndrome Questionnaire: The Symptom Severity Scale (SSS) and Functional Status Scale (FSS). We conducted a one‐way repeated analysis of variance for 3 time points (4, 12, and 24 weeks) for both SSS and FSS, respectively, for change scores from time 0, and percentage change from time 0.ResultsAll participants (n = 12 per group) completed the study. From 0 to 24 weeks the HD‐10 group outperformed the HD‐5 group for improvement in SSS (median ± IQR; −0.8 ± 0.4 versus −0.5 ± 0.5; P = .024) and FSS scores (mean ± SD; −0.8 ± 0.2 versus −0.5 ± 0.5; P = .011). The HD‐10 group improvement in FSS subtest significantly exceeded the MCID percentage‐change‐based threshold of 27% (34%; P = .039).ConclusionsDespite the limitations of small study size, a largely inert injectate, and a single injection approach, these findings in favor of the 10 mL group suggest that the volume used for ultrasound‐guided HD in moderate CTS matters, and a higher volume is more effective.

Funder

Ministry of Science and Technology

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology

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