| Literature DB >> 31795987 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The severity of carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) may be categorised in a number of ways utilising one of a range of presently available grading tools. The grading systems proposed by Bland and Padua are the most commonly used, however, both have limitations, which are discussed in detail in this paper. The aim of this research is to establish, using the best available evidence, a clinically appropriate revision of the current CTS nerve conduction grading tool, and to compare with existing grading tools used in UK Neurophysiology clinics. The revised scale is designed from a clinical physiologist perspective and based on the numerical values of nerve conduction findings. The proposed revised grading system is based on more nuanced, descriptive categories, ranging from Normal to Early, Mild Sensory, Mild Sensory Motor, Moderate Sensory, Moderate Sensory Motor, Severe Sensory Motor, Extremely Severe Sensory Motor, and Complete absence.Entities:
Keywords: CTS Gradings; Grading tools for carpal tunnel syndrome; Neurophysiological CTS grading
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31795987 PMCID: PMC6892195 DOI: 10.1186/s12891-019-2928-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Fig. 1Result
Result
| Normal | 968 |
| Early | 271 |
| Mild sensory | 215 |
| Mild S/M | 51 |
| Moderate Sensory | 134 |
| Moderate S/M | 356 |
| Severe S/M | 204 |
| Extremely Severe S/M | 33 |
| Complete | 14 |
| Total Hands | 2246 |
Percentage comparison with grading of Padua, Bland and Hirani
| Padua (%) | Bland (%) | Hirani (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Normal = 18 (3) | Normal = 3269 (38) | Normal =968 (43) | |
| Minimal = 123 (21) | Very mild = 684 (8) | Early =271 (12) | |
| Mild = 145 (24) | Mild sensory-motor = 944 (11) | Mild sensory = 215 (10) | |
| Mild S/M = 51 (2) | |||
| Moderate = 217 (36) | Moderately Severe =1359 (16) | Moderate sensory = 134 (6) | |
| Moderate S/M = 356 (16) | |||
| Severe = 81 (14) | Severe = 568 (7) | Severe S/M = 204 (9) | |
| Extremely severe = 16 (3) | Very severe = 930 (11) | Extremely Severe S/M = 33 (1) | |
| Extremely Severe = 387 (5) | Complete = 14 (1) | ||
| Total Hands | 600 | 8501 | 2246 |
Grading comparison of Bland with propose grading
| Grading | Bland [ | Modified grading by Hirani |
|---|---|---|
| Grade1 | Inching, palm/wrist median/ulnar comparison, ring finger double peak | Early: SCV = 45–50 m/s interpeak potentials in digit IV > 0.5 ms, DML < 4.2 ms. Amplitude of sensory ≥5 μV and motor potentials ≥5 mV |
| Grade2 | Mild: sensory conduction velocity(SCV) < 40 m/s distal motor latency (DML) < 4.5 ms | Mild sensory: SCV = 40–44 m/s with normal sensory amplitude (NSA), DML, motor nerve action potentials (MNAP) and sensory conduction velocity (SCV) & motor conduction velocity (MCV) |
| Grade3 | Moderately severe: DML > 4.5 ms and < 6.5 ms with sensory nerve action potentials (SNAP) preserved | Mild sensory motor: SCV = 40-44 m/s with NSA, DML > 4.2 ms with normal motor amplitude (NMA) and normal SCV and MCV |
| Grade4 | Severe: DML > 4.5 ms and < 6.5 ms with absent SNAP | Moderate sensory: SCV < 40 m/s with NSA, normal DML, NMA, SCV and MCV |
| Grade5 | Very severe: DML > 6.5 ms. | Moderate sensory motor: SCV < 40 m/s with NSA, DML > 4.2 ms, MNA and SCV and MCV |
| Grade6 | Extremely Severe: motor nerve action potentials (MNAP) < 0.2 mV, | Severe Sensory motor: Absent or < 3 μV SNAP with SCV < 30 m/s with DML > 4.2 ms with either slow or normal MCV and or NMA |
| Grade7 | Extremely severe: SNAP and MNAP = absent, but recordable from both median and ulnar 2nd lumbricals with prolonged median 2nd lumbricals response as compare to ulnar lumbricals | |
| Grade8 | Complete: SNAP and MNAP = absent and absent from median 2nd lumbricals and present from ulnar 2nd lumbricals |