BackgroundThe diagnosis of carpal tunnel syndrome is based on a combination of clinical history, clinical examination and frequent use of electrodiagnostics as nerve conduction study and electromyography which often do not provide the spatial and anatomical localizing information, especially with small nerves of the extremities. Conventional magnetic resonance imaging can reveal morphological changes in carpal tunnel syndrome patients.AimThe purpose of our study was to assess the efficacy of diffusion magnetic resonance imaging as a functional imaging in evaluation of median nerve in carpal tunnel syndrome.Patients and methodsThis prospective study included a group of 33 patients with carpal tunnel syndrome diagnosed by both clinical examination and electromyography; 40 writs were examined. A control group of 20 subjects of matched age group were also included. All the participants were subjected to conventional and diffusion magnetic resonance imaging studies.ResultsMedian nerve apparent diffusion coefficient values of patients are lower than those of controls. The sensitivity and diagnostic accuracy of diffusion conventional magnetic resonance imaging were 95% and 97.5%, respectively, versus 25% and 62.5% of conventional magnetic resonance imaging. A cut-off apparent diffusion coefficient value ≤ 0.99 obtained at distal radio-ulnar joint level and > 1.07 at pisiform level as well as apparent diffusion coefficient ratio at a cut-off ≤ 0.2 was significantly valid for diagnosing carpal tunnel syndrome.ConclusionsDiffusion magnetic resonance imaging provides functional evaluation of median nerve in patients with carpal tunnel syndrome.