Abstract

There is no agreement about whether patients with bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome should undergo staged or simultaneous open decompression. The purpose of this study was to quantify and compare the functional difficulties during the recovery from surgery for patients undergoing staged or simultaneous decompressions. Sixty-three patients had surgery; 33 had staged decompression (Group 1) and 30 simultaneous decompressions (Group 2). Functional difficulties were recorded using the Levine and Quick-DASH scores along with a visual analogue score for pain. There were no complications in either group. There was no significant difference in terms of pain or satisfaction. Functional difficulties were greater in the simultaneous group; however, there was no difference in completing simple tasks. Patients reported high satisfaction with either management approach. However, significantly fewer would consider undergoing simultaneous decompression again.

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