Purpose: To compare the outcomes of percutaneous carpal tunnel release (PCTR) and mini-open carpal tunnel release (mini-OCTR) using ultrasonographic guidance for both techniques.
Methods: We included 74 hands of 65 women with idiopathic carpal tunnel syndrome (age, 52-71 y; mean, 58 y). Thirty-five hands of 29 women had the PCTR (release with a device consisting of an angled blade, guide, and holder, along a line midway between the median nerve and ulnar artery (safe line) under ultrasonography (incision, 4 mm), and 39 hands of 36 women had the mini-OCTR (release along the safe line, distally under direct vision (incision, 1-1.
Muscle Nerve
September 2005
In idiopathic carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS), the median nerve is enlarged within the carpal tunnel due to intraneural connective tissue proliferation. Because hypercholesterolemia, especially increase in low-density lipoprotein (LDL), has been associated with fibrogenesis, we investigated the association of median nerve cross-sectional area and prevalence of idiopathic CTS with serum lipid measurements in middle-aged patients and controls. We found that nerve area and prevalence of CTS were correlated with serum LDL levels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeverity-correlated enlargement of the median nerve occurs in idiopathic carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS). We determined whether measurement of the nerve cross-sectional area was useful in making the diagnosis of CTS. In 414 wrists of 275 patients with clinically diagnosed idiopathic CTS and 408 wrists of 408 controls, we made ultrasonographic measurements of the nerve area at the distal (distal edge of the flexor retinaculum), mid (hook of the hamate), and proximal carpal tunnel (wrist crease).
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