| Literature DB >> 29017511 |
Margreet Meems1, Viola Spek1, Willem J Kop1, Berend-Jan Meems2, Leo H Visser3, Victor J M Pop4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) is a common, compressive nerve-entrapment disorder with symptoms of numbness, paresthesia, and pain. Carpal tunnel release surgery is the only known long-term effective treatment. However, surgery is invasive and up to 30% of patients report recurrence or persistence of symptoms or suffer from post-surgical complications. A promising non-surgical treatment for CTS is mechanical wrist traction. The purpose of this study was to evaluate clinical outcomes following mechanical traction in patients with CTS compared to care as usual.Entities:
Keywords: Boston carpal tunnel questionnaire; Carpal tunnel release surgery; Carpal tunnel syndrome; Mechanical traction
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29017511 PMCID: PMC5634882 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-017-2208-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Fig. 1Flow chart of inclusions
Baseline characteristics of the sample (n = 181)
| Total ( | Intervention ( | Care as usual ( |
| |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean ( |
| Mean ( |
| Mean ( |
|
|
| |
| Demographic features | ||||||||
| Age (in years) | 58.1 (13.0) | 59.0 (12.4) | 57.2 (13.7) | .339 | ||||
| Sex | .454 | |||||||
| Male | 59 (32.6) | 33 (35.1) | 26 (29.9) | |||||
| Female | 122 (67.4) | 61 (64.9) | 61 (70.1) | |||||
| Educational level | .809 | |||||||
| Low | 149 (82.3) | 78 (83.0) | 71 (81.6) | |||||
| High | 32 (17.7) | 16 (17.0) | 16 (18.4) | |||||
| Marital status | .560 | |||||||
| With partner | 138 (76.2) | 70 (74.5) | 68 (78.2) | |||||
| CTS-related | ||||||||
| Duration of complaints | .212 | |||||||
| < 3 years | 136 (75.4) | 67 (71.3) | 69 (79.3) | |||||
| > 3 years | 45 (24.9) | 27 (28.7) | 18 (20.7) | |||||
| Dominant hand involved? | .950 | |||||||
| No | 35 (19.3) | 19 (20.2) | 16 (18.4) | |||||
| Yes | 53 (29.3) | 27 (28.7) | 26 (29.9) | |||||
| Both hands | 93 (51.4) | 48 (51.1) | 45 (51.7) | |||||
| Direct relative with CTS | 54 (29.8) | 28 (29.8) | 26 (29.9) | .989 | ||||
| Paid hand labor? | .605 | |||||||
| No | 113 (62.4) | 57 (60.6) | 56 (66.4) | |||||
| Heavy | 68 (37.6) | 37 (39.4) | 31 (35.6) | |||||
| SSS score | 2.86 (0.77) | 2.89 (0.80) | 2.82 (0.74) | .589 | ||||
| FSS score | 2.34 (0.89) | 2.39 (0.92) | 2.28 (0.86) | .374 | ||||
| BCTQ score | 2.64 (0.76) | 2.68 (0.79) | 2.59 (0.72) | .421 | ||||
| Lifestyle habits | ||||||||
| Smoking | 29 (16.0) | 16 (17.0) | 13 (14.9) | .703 | ||||
| Alcohol | 43 (23.8) | 24 (25.5) | 19 (21.8) | .560 | ||||
| BMI | 28.8 (5.08) | 29.2 (5.24) | 28.4 (4.89) | .296 | ||||
BMI Body Mass Index, CTS carpal tunnel syndrome, BCTQ Boston Carpal Tunnel Questionnaire, FSS Functional Status Scale, SD standard deviation, SSS Symptom Severity Scale
Fig. 2Kaplan-Meier survival curves. Analysis of the number of days after randomization until occurrence of surgery for the intervention and care-as-usual groups (log-rank test χ 2 1 = 6.94, p = .008)
Comparison of carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) symptom scores at 6 months’ follow-up between the intervention and care-as-usual groups
| Mean (SE) score intervention group ( | Mean score (SE) care as usual group ( |
|
| |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SSS | 1.84 (0.10) | 1.89 (0.14) | − .32 | .747 |
| FSS | 1.75 (0.09) | 1.75 (0.09) | − .07 | .947 |
| BCTQ | 1.80 (0.08) | 1.84 (0.08) | − .31 | .756 |
BCTQ Boston Carpal Tunnel Questionnaire, FSS Functional Status Scale, SE standard error, SSS Symptom Severity Scale