Abstract

The aim of this study was to review the literature to determine the prevalence of cold sensitivity in upper extremity nerve compression syndromes and the impact of treating nerve compression syndromes on cold sensitivity. Following a standardized scoping review protocol, this study included interventional and observational study designs assessing patients with cold sensitivity and upper extremity nerve compression syndromes. Review articles, case reports, and small case series (n < 5) were excluded. The abstracts and eligible full texts were screened by 2 independent reviewers. Data were extracted and reported according to PRISMA extension for scoping reviews statement. Three databases were searched (Ovid MEDLINE, Ovid EMBASE, and CINAHL on EBSCO); 274 references were reviewed. Fifteen studies from the database search and 8 studies from the reference search were eligible for this review (n= 23). Two interventional and 21 observational studies were identified. The most common method for assessing cold sensitivity was cold pain threshold testing (n= 12), followed by subjective patient reporting (n= 4). The Cold Intolerance Symptom Severity questionnaire was the most common validated patient-reported outcome questionnaire used in the studies (n= 3). Cold sensitivity was most commonly reported in carpal tunnel syndrome (96% of the studies). The prevalence of cold sensitivity in nerve compression syndromes ranged from 20% to 69%. Nerve decompression improved the severity of cold sensitivity in 5 of 6 studies where cold sensitivity was studied. There is heterogenicity in the studies assessing cold sensitivity in nerve compression syndromes. Despite moderate prevalence in patients with carpal tunnel syndrome, cold sensitivity is understudied. Within the limitations of eligible studies reviewed, surgical decompression improved the severity of cold sensitivity in some studies. Therapeutic IV.

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