AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined how occupational factors like forceful gripping and wrist positions affect the movement and deformation of the median nerve in the carpal tunnel.
  • Participants performed different gripping tasks with varying force levels and wrist positions while researchers measured nerve movement and size using ultrasound technology.
  • Results showed that extreme wrist positions, especially 30° ulnar deviation, increased nerve travel and altered its cross-sectional area, suggesting potential links to the development of carpal tunnel syndrome from these workplace activities.

Article Abstract

Background: We assessed median nerve travel and deformation concurrently to better understand the influence of occupational risk factors on carpal tunnel dynamics, including forceful chuck gripping and deviated wrist positions.

Methods: Fourteen healthy right-hand dominant participants performed a chuck grip in 6 experimental conditions: two relative force levels (10% and 40% of maximum voluntary effort); three wrist positions (15° radial deviation, 0° neutral, 30° ulnar deviation). Chuck grip forces were measured with a load cell while the transverse cross-section of the carpal tunnel was imaged via ultrasound at the distal wrist crease. Images of the median nerve were analyzed in ImageJ to assess cross-sectional area, circularity, width, and height as well as travel in the anterior-posterior and medial-lateral axes.

Results: We found a main effect of deviated wrist position on both anterior-posterior and medial-lateral travel, with the greatest nerve travel occurring in 30° ulnar deviation. There was also a significant interaction between chuck grip force and deviated wrist position on cross-sectional area. Specifically, the area decreased with 40% vs. 10% chuck grip force when the wrist was in 30° ulnar deviation; however, there were no changes in 0° neutral and 15° radial deviation.

Discussion: Overall, we demonstrated that forceful chuck gripping in deviated wrist positions influenced carpal tunnel dynamics, resulting in both migratory and morphological changes to the median nerve. These changes may, in turn, increase local strain and stress with adjacent structures in the carpal tunnel. Future studies mapping contact stress between structures may further elucidate injury development of work-related carpal tunnel syndrome.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7983861PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.11038DOI Listing

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