effect of wrist deviation on median nerve cross-sectional area at proximal carpal tunnel level

Authors

ping yeap loh

satoshi muraki

abstract

background: carpal tunnel syndrome (cts) is one of the most common musculoskeletal disorders among computer users. computer users exhibit various wrist angles while typing. dynamic changes of wrist angle may cause different degrees of median nerve compression. the objective of this study was thus to investigate the effects of the combination of wrist flexion-extension with wrist deviation on median nerve cross-sectional area (mncsa). methods:   eight right-handed participants were recruited in this study. both wrists were examined by sonographic ultrasound (us) at the proximal carpal tunnel level in the transverse plane. a total of nine wrist positions were examined, including wrist neutral (wn), wrist flexion (wf)30°, and wrist extension (we)30°, together with three wrist deviation conditions, namely, without radial deviation (rd) and ulnar deviation (ud), with maximal rd and with maximal ud. mncsa was measured by tracing method with imagej . results: paired t -test showed a significant difference of wn mncsa between the dominant hand (7.93 ± 0.63 mm 2 ) and the non-dominant hand (6.98 ± 0.42 mm 2 ) ( p <0.001). two-way repeated-measures anova (handedness as an independent factor) showed that wf30° and we30° caused significant differences of mncsa when compared with wn ( p <0.001). however, wrist rd/ud did not have a significant interaction with the changes of mncsa in wn, wf and we positions. conclusion: the results indicate a significant reduction of mncsa when wn changed to wf and we. wrist rd and ud did not cause significant changes of mncsa at different wrist positions.

Upgrade to premium to download articles

Sign up to access the full text

Already have an account?login

similar resources

Dominance in hands and cross-sectional area of median nerve in carpal tunnel syndrome

Introduction: Currently, neuroresearchers report that the median nerve shows severity-correlated intracarpal enlargement in idiopathic carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) as a most common peripheral neuropathic disorder. The purpose of this paper was to investigate ultrasonography morphological findings in patients with idiopathic CTS and comparing some physical properties such as age, gender, BMI wit...

full text

Effect of Wrist Angle on Median Nerve Appearance at the Proximal Carpal Tunnel

This study investigated the effects of wrist angle, sex, and handedness on the changes in the median nerve cross-sectional area (MNCSA) and median nerve diameters, namely longitudinal diameter (D1) and vertical diameter (D2). Ultrasound examination was conducted to examine the median nerve at the proximal carpal tunnel in both dominant and nondominant hands of men (n = 27) and women (n = 26). A...

full text

the best cutoff point for median nerve cross sectional area at the level of carpal tunnel inlet.

carpal tunnel syndrome (cts) is the most common entrapment neuropathy. it accounts 90% of all entrapment neuropathies all over the world. ultrasound is a non-invasive, cost effective and available para-clinical method which could be applied for cts diagnosis. cross-sectional area of the median nerve at the level of the inlet is considered as a diagnostic criterion in cts cases. in this study, t...

full text

a comparison of the ultrasonographic median nerve cross-sectional area at the wrist and the wrist-to-forearm ratio in carpal tunnel syndrome

background: electrophysiologic (edx) study is the most valuable method in grading the severity of carpal tunnel syndrome (cts), but it is invasive and painful. we evaluated the efficacy of ultrasound for this purpose. materials and methods: eighty-one wrists of 52 consecutive patients with clinical evidences of cts, confirmed and graded by edx as mild, moderate, and severe, were examined by ult...

full text

dominance in hands and cross-sectional area of median nerve in carpal tunnel syndrome

introduction: currently, neuroresearchers report that the median nerve shows severity-correlated intracarpal enlargement in idiopathic carpal tunnel syndrome (cts) as a most common peripheral neuropathic disorder. the purpose of this paper was to investigate ultrasonography morphological findings in patients with idiopathic cts and comparing some physical properties such as age, gender, bmi wit...

full text

A comparison of the ultrasonographic median nerve cross-sectional area at the wrist and the wrist-to-forearm ratio in carpal tunnel syndrome

BACKGROUND Electrophysiologic (EDX) study is the most valuable method in grading the severity of carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS), but it is invasive and painful. We evaluated the efficacy of ultrasound for this purpose. MATERIALS AND METHODS Eighty-one wrists of 52 consecutive patients with clinical evidences of CTS, confirmed and graded by EDX as mild, moderate, and severe, were examined by ult...

full text

My Resources

Save resource for easier access later


Journal title:
iranian journal of public health

جلد ۴۳، شماره ۳، صفحات ۱۸۰-۱۸۵

Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com

copyright © 2015-2023