Functional Status of Patients Subjected to Surgery for Carpal Tunnel Syndrome

Objective: Describe functional status of patients who underwent surgery for carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) in an orthopedic public hospital. Materials and Methods: Descriptive, cross-sectional, nonexperimental study. Study group consisted of patients who underwent surgery for CTS between May 2014 and...

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Veröffentlicht in:Hand (New York, N.Y.) N.Y.), 2016-09, Vol.11 (1_suppl), p.148S-149S
Hauptverfasser: Antunez, Marcela, Aguirre, Marcela, Arciego, Jorge, Sanhueza, Eduardo, Gutierrez, Rodrigo
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective: Describe functional status of patients who underwent surgery for carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) in an orthopedic public hospital. Materials and Methods: Descriptive, cross-sectional, nonexperimental study. Study group consisted of patients who underwent surgery for CTS between May 2014 and May 2015 in a public hospital of Santiago, Chile. All patients were treated with open retinaculotomy and followed the same rehabilitation protocol. Exclusion criteria include psychiatric disorders, substance abuse, acute or recurrent CTS, other neurological diseases, and people who refuse to participate in the study. Study group (N = 85) was contacted by phone and scheduled for an assessment appointment. All participants signed informed consent approved by hospital’s Ethics Committee prior to evaluation. Data collection process meant no risk to participants. The following measurements were performed: application of Levine score, grip strength (GS), lateral pinch (LP) and three-digit pinch (TDP) strength, thumb opposition (TO) (Kapandji), thumb radial abduction (TRA), and thumb palmar abduction (TPA) range of motion (ROM). Outcomes are time diagnosis—surgery, time surgery—assessment, number of therapy sessions, return to activities of daily life, ROM for TO, TRA and TPA, GS, LP and TDP strength, and Levine score. Data were tabulated and analyzed with SPSS v23.0 software; descriptive analysis was conducted. Results: Thirty-six of 85 patients were eligible and contacted by phone, 26 were scheduled for assessment appointment, and 17 completed the evaluation during February to March 2016; 94.1% were women, average age of 51.0 (standard deviation [SD] = 7.15) years old and right-handed. Mean age at the time of the diagnosis was 48.08 (SD = 7.83) years old; people had to wait 18.75 (SD = 19.45) months average for surgery. None of the participants reported complications (infection, dehiscence, recurrence, pillar pain, other); 82.5% returned to their main activity (work or study). All participants underwent at least 10 sessions of physiotherapy. All parameters distributed normally (Shapiro-Wilk test). When comparing the mean of ROM for TO (Operated Right Hand [ORH] p = 1.000; Operated Left Hand [OLH] p = 0.583), TRA ([ORH] p = 0.423; [OLH] p=0.0.367), TPA ([ORH] p = 1.000; [OLH] p = 0.949), GS ([ORH] p = 0.222; [OLH] p = 0.258), LP ([ORH] p = 0.300; [OLH] p = 0.165) and TDP strength ([ORH] p = 0.192; [OLH] p = 0.005) between operated (right or left) and contralateral han
ISSN:1558-9447
1558-9455
DOI:10.1177/1558944716660555kl