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      Ultra-Minimally Invasive Ultrasound-Guided Carpal Tunnel Release : A Randomized Clinical Trial

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          Abstract

          The purpose of this study was to compare the outcomes of 1-mm ultra-minimally invasive ultrasound-guided carpal tunnel release and 2-cm blind mini-open carpal tunnel release.

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          Most cited references37

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          Endoscopic release of the carpal tunnel: a randomized prospective multicenter study.

          A 10-center randomized prospective multicenter study of endoscopic release of the carpal tunnel was carried out. Surgery was performed with a new device for transecting the transverse carpal ligament while control hands were treated with conventional open surgery. There were 122 patients in the study; 25 had carpal tunnel surgery on both hands and 97 had surgery on one hand. Of the surgical procedures, 65 were in the control group and 82 were in the device group. The endoscopic device was coupled to a fiberoptic light and a video camera. A trigger-activated blade was used to incise the transverse carpal ligament. After surgery, the best predictors of return to work and to activities of daily living were strength and tenderness variables. For patients in the device group with one affected hand, the median time for return to work was 21 1/2 days less than that for the control group. Two patients treated with the endoscopic device required reoperation by open surgical decompression; only one of these had incomplete release with the device. Two patients in the device group experienced transient ulnar neurapraxia.
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            Carpal tunnel release. A prospective, randomized assessment of open and endoscopic methods.

            To define the role of two-portal endoscopic carpal-tunnel release as a method for the treatment of compression of the median nerve at the wrist, a prospective, randomized, multicenter study was performed on 169 hands in 145 patients. Either open or endoscopic carpal-tunnel release was performed in all of the patients who had clinical signs and symptoms consistent with carpal tunnel syndrome, had not responded to or had refused non-operative management, and had had electrodiagnostic studies consistent with carpal tunnel syndrome. Follow-up evaluations were performed at twenty-one, forty-two, and eighty-four days. At the end of the follow-up period, both the open and endoscopic methods had resulted in high levels of achievement of the primary outcomes (relief of pain and paresthesias). The numbness and paresthesias were relieved in eighty (98 per cent) of eighty-two hands in the open-release group compared with seventy-seven (99 per cent) of seventy-eight hands in the endoscopic-release group. This parameter was not recorded for three hands in the open-release group or six hands in the endoscopic-release group. The satisfaction of the patients with the procedure, graded on a scale of 0 to 100 per cent, averaged 84 per cent in the open-release group compared with 89 per cent in the group that had had endoscopic release. We found no significant differences between the two groups with regard to the secondary quantitative-outcome measurements, including two-point discrimination, postoperative interstitial-pressure data for the carpal canal, Semmes-Weinstein monofilament testing, and motor strength. The open technique resulted in more tenderness of the scar than did the endoscopic method. Thirty-two (39 per cent) of eighty-two hands in the open-release group and fifty (64 per cent) of seventy-eight hands in the endoscopic-release group were not tender at eighty-four days. This parameter was not recorded for three hands in the open-release group and six hands in the endoscopic-release group. The open method also resulted in a longer interval until the patient could return to work (median, twenty-eight days, compared with fourteen days for the open-release and endoscopic-release groups). Four complications occurred in the endoscopic carpal-tunnel release group: one partial transection of the superficial palmar arch, one digital-nerve contusion, one ulnar-nerve neuropraxia, and one wound hematoma.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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              Evaluation of the Spanish version of the DASH and carpal tunnel syndrome health-related quality-of-life instruments: Cross-cultural adaptation process and reliability

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine
                Wiley
                02784297
                June 2016
                June 2016
                April 22 2016
                : 35
                : 6
                : 1149-1157
                Article
                10.7863/ultra.15.07001
                27105949
                c74a265c-6f2d-4208-8c7d-d333e3b0df05
                © 2016

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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