View clinical trials related to Carpal Tunnel Syndrome.
Filter by:Introduction Carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) is the most common peripheral nerve entrapment syndrome in Finland and worldwide. Nowadays carpal tunnel release (CTR) surgery is often done in local anaesthesia. Often the most painful event during CTR is the injection of the local anaesthetic. Multiple different methods have been trialed and buffering the local anaesthetic seems to have good results in reducing the pain caused by the injection. However, no study has buffered long-acting local anaesthetic in CTR surgery, and no study has accounted for the patient's individual pain tolerance in the groups. There are no comparisons of the results to minimal clinically important difference (MCID) for pain. Hypothesis In this study the investigators will evaluate the effects of buffering long-lasting local anaesthetic in wide-awake local anaesthesia no tourniquet (WALANT) CTR. This study's hypothesis is that buffering long-acting local anaesthetic with sodium bicarbonate decreases the pain of the injection. The investigators also expect that buffering will reduce the number of needle stings felt during injection, will result in as good perioperative pain control, will lengthen the effect of anaesthetic, will reduce postoperative painkiller usage, will have at least as good functional outcome and greater patient satisfaction. Methods This study will enlist 116 patients and divide the patients into two groups in this double blinded randomized controlled trial. One group receives non-buffered, and the second group buffered local anaesthetic. This study's primary outcome is to compare burning, pressure, needle sting and total pain the patient experienced between the groups. The investigators will assess this using VAS, and will compare the results to MCID. The investigators secondary outcomes are comparisons of expected injection pain level and pain during CTR with VAS, individual pain tolerance/catastrophising tendency with preoperative PCS-FINv2.0 form, the number of needle stings the patient feels during the injection, functional outcome and improvement of the patients' symptoms with The Boston Carpal Tunnel Questionnaire (Likert 5) before and after the surgery, evaluation of patient satisfaction with net promoter score (NPS) and the use of painkillers, duration of analgesia and pain levels using VAS after the surgery until the 3rd postoperative night.
The aim of the study is to examine the effects of ESWT applications at different pulse rates on pain, function, grip strength and median nerve conduction velocity in patients with Carpal Tunnel Syndrome. The patients will be randomly divided into 3 groups: the low dose ESWT group (28), the high dose ESWT group (28), and the control group (28). The first two groups will receive ESWT treatment at different doses, while the control group will be treated with sound only (1 time/week-3 weeks).
Carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) causes numbness and pain in the hand and arm, and is an important cause of work absence and disability. The aim of the NOR-CACTUS Trial is to compare outcomes of a treatment strategy where the initial treatment is up to two ultrasound-guided corticosteroid injections, followed by scheduled clinical assessment of treatment effect, and subsequent surgery if needed, to a treatment strategy where surgery is the first-line treatment. Participants will be randomized to one of the treatment strategies, and followed up for two years after start of the study intervention. Outcomes will include patient-reported, clinical, functional and neurophysiological measures, and health-economic aspects. The hypothesis of the study is that there is no difference between the two treatment groups in the percentage of patients with a satisfactory symptom relief (treatment success) one year after the initial therapeutic intervention.
Carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) is the most common and median nerve neuropathy at the wrist, caused by compression of the median nerve at the level of the carpal tunnel (CT) delimitated by the carpal bones and the transverse carpal ligament(TCL) which is the intermediate part of the flexor retinaculum (FR). The CTS remains a challenge for health care providers due to its high prevalence and economic consequences, it is projected that in every 5 patients, 1 complains of symptoms of pain, numbness and a tingling sensation in the hands, CTS is estimated to occur in 3.8% of the general population with an incidence rate of 276:100000 per year and happens more frequently in women than in men so a prevalence rate of 9.2% in women and 6% in men
Aim of the study The aim of the study is to evaluate the role of pulsed radiofrequency versus platelet rich plasma injection in treatment of idiopathic mild to moderate carpal tunnel syndrome Patients will be classified into three equal groups using randomized closed envelop method into three groups. Control Group ( n=25):Patients will receive median nerve perineural injection of bupivacaine with mehylprednisolone under ultrasound guidance. PRF Group ( n=25):Patients will receive median nerve pulsed radiofrequency (PRF) and median nerve perineural injection of bupivacaine under ultrasound guidance PRP Group (n=25): Patients will receive median nerve perineural injection of platelet-rich plasma (PRP) under ultrasound guidance Measurements (will be done before the procedure, one week ,two month and four months after procedure except SNCV and serum CRP and TNF α (tumor necrosis factor alpha)will be done before the procedure and after four months only): 1. VAS (visual analogue pain scale) 2. BCTQ (Boston carpal tunnel Questionnaire) 3. Degree of paresthesia tested by Reverse Phalen's test. 4. CSA (cross sectional area)0 of the median nerve will be measured by the same pain therapist involved in the study. 5. SNCV (nerve conduction velocity study): performed by same physiotherapist not involved in the study before and after intervention. 6. Serum Tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF α). 7. C-reactive protein (CRP) 8. Complications will be recorded and managed. Items 1,2 and 3 will be measured by a pain therapist not involved in this study
This prospective study aims to evaluate the median nerve in Carpal Tunnel Syndrome by high-frequency ultrasound and color Doppler in comparison with clinical and Nerve conduction studies.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the prevalence of amyloidosis in population of patient affected by suspect bilateral carpal tunnel with indication of surgery
This study is being conducted to determine whether addition of a longer-acting local anesthetic to our current anesthetic protocol improves the post-operative pain after carpal tunnel release. Participants undergoing carpal tunnel release (CTR) will be randomly assigned to one of two groups: the standard anesthetic or the longer-acting anesthetic. Participants will not be aware of their assignment. Carpal tunnel release will be performed in the standard fashion at our hospital. Participants will record their post-operative pain on a visual scale at 2, 4, 6, 8, and 10 hours after surgery. They will also record the location of their post-operative numbness at the same time intervals. The day after surgery, a research nurse will call each participant to inquire about their post-operative pain scores and numbness. Participants will also be asked about their consumption of oral painkillers (e.g. Tylenol, ibuprofen) during the first 24 hours. Participants will be re-assessed 3 months after surgery to evaluate improvement in carpal tunnel symptoms. Participants who wish to have carpal tunnel release on both wrists will be randomized to receive one type of anesthetic for the first side and will receive the other anesthetic for the second side. They will not be made aware of which medication is used for each side. This will allow us to directly compare the difference in pain experience between the two anesthetics. We hypothesize that use of a longer-acting local anesthetic will lead to decreased post-operative pain, especially in the first 4-8 hours after surgery.
Carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) results from the entrapment neuropathy of median nerve at the wrist, and most cases are idiopathic. So far, there are many treatments were developed (Surgical decompression, local injection of steroids, Wrist splints) but they are not fully satisfactory, other treatment modalities need to be further evaluated. Both Acupuncture and laser acupuncture treatments for CTS have been reported. However, those studies still lack associated evidence to evaluate the efficacy of acupuncture and laser acupuncture. The object of the study is to investigate the efficacy of acupuncture compared with laser acupuncture in patients with mild-to-moderate carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS). Nerve conduction studies (NCS) and global symptom score (GSS) assessment will apply to measure objective changes in this randomized, controlled study.
This study assesses the potential benefit of adjuvant platelet-rich plasma (PRP) with carpal tunnel release (CTR) for patients with severe carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS). CTR is a rather common procedure performed and seems to be quite effective for those with moderate CTS, but a number of patients with severe CTS do not have quite the same response post-CTR. The investigators will recruit patients who fall into the severe CTS category and compare CTR with and without adjuvant PRP to see if PRP can improve outcomes of this common surgery.