Abstract

Carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) is the most common entrapment neuropathy. Median nerve mobilization is a manual therapy intervention used for treating CTS. The aim of the present study was to investigate the effectiveness of median nerve mobilization in relieving manifestations of CTS when compared with conventional medical treatment. A total of 28 CTS patients were divided into two groups: patients in group I (n = 18) underwent median nerve mobilization, and those in group II (n = 10) underwent conventional medical treatment. Median nerve mobilization consisted of 18 treatments (three/week for 6 weeks). Patients were assessed for hand sensitivity, paresthesia, strength, pain, night awakening, thenar eminence atrophy, and were subjected to Phalen’s test, Tinel’s sign, Boston Carpal Tunnel Questionnaire’s Symptom Severity Scale (BCTQ-SSS) and Functional Status Scale (BCTQ-FSS), and sensory and motor conduction studies for median nerve at baseline and at 6 weeks after treatment. At baseline versus at 6 weeks, pain, sensation, paresthesia, tingling, Tinel’s signs, and Phalen’s test outcomes were significantly improved in both groups; wrist flexion and extension improved only in group I. The difference between group I and group II after 6 weeks was significant as regards tingling, pain, wrist flexion, and extension. BCTQ-SSS and BCTQ-FSS scores improved after 6 weeks compared with baseline in patients in group I, whereas in group II the improvement was observed in BCTQ-FSS; the difference between the groups was significant. Sensory nerve conduction velocity, sensory distal latency, sensory amplitude, distal motor latency, and motor amplitude were significantly improved after 6 weeks in group I. In addition, there was a change in the grade of CTS, whereas in group II there was improvement only in sensory nerve conduction velocity; the difference between the groups was not significant. CTS improves after median nerve mobilization, which is better than conventional medical treatment. It provides support for the use of manual therapy in conservative management of CTS with satisfactory results.

Highlights

  • Carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) is the most common entrapment neuropathy

  • BCTQ-Symptom Severity Scale (SSS) and BCTQ-Functional Status Scale (FSS) scores improved after 6 weeks compared with baseline in patients in group I, whereas in group II the improvement was observed in BCTQ-FSS; the difference between the groups was significant

  • The current study investigated the effect of manual therapy techniques as treatment for patients experiencing CTS

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Summary

Introduction

Carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) is the most common entrapment neuropathy. It is characterized by signs and symptoms resulting from the compression of the median nerve within the carpal tunnel, which is located between the transverse carpal ligament and the carpal bone at the wrist. Women are affected up to five times more often than are men [1,2,3] It causes dysesthesia and hypoesthesia, motor deficit, and pain, especially at night, within the median nerve distribution in the fingers that are secondary to the mechanical compression and local ischemia [4,5]. Patients were assessed for hand sensitivity, paresthesia, strength, pain, night awakening, thenar eminence atrophy, and were subjected to Phalen’s test, Tinel’s sign, Boston Carpal Tunnel Questionnaire’s Symptom Severity Scale (BCTQ-SSS) and Functional Status Scale (BCTQ-FSS), and sensory and motor conduction studies for median nerve at baseline and at 6 weeks after treatment

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