Affiliation:
1. Department of Clinical Neurophysiology, East Kent Hospitals University Foundation NHS Trust, Canterbury, Kent, UK
Abstract
This review article examines the use of nerve conduction studies in the management of carpal tunnel syndrome. These studies should be understood not as a test that determines the diagnosis but as a measure of impaired nerve function. They are sensitive indicators of local demyelination and axonal loss that can detect and quantify these changes before the appearance of clinical signs, providing information that cannot be obtained with the unaided senses of the physician, nor by any other investigation. They are the best available indicator of overall disease severity, correlating with symptoms and anatomical change in the median nerve. They have some prognostic value for surgical outcome and are sufficiently sensitive to change for the evaluation of treatment response. When surgery does not yield the expected improvement in symptoms, they can help to establish whether decompression has been achieved provided preoperative results are available for comparison.
Cited by
4 articles.
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1. Carpal tunnel syndrome;Nature Reviews Disease Primers;2024-05-23
2. Evaluation of smartphone-assisted infrared thermal imaging efficiency in carpal tunnel syndrome;The Egyptian Journal of Neurology, Psychiatry and Neurosurgery;2024-02-19
3. Wrist & Hand;Bone & Joint 360;2023-12-01
4. Nerve compression syndromes: what more can we learn?;Journal of Hand Surgery (European Volume);2023-10-30