Do nerve conduction studies or ultrasound imaging correlate more closely with subjective symptom severity in carpal tunnel syndrome?
Boston Carpal Tunnel Questionnaire
carpal tunnel syndrome
correlation
cross-sectional area measurement
severity
ultrasound
Journal
Muscle & nerve
ISSN: 1097-4598
Titre abrégé: Muscle Nerve
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 7803146
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
09 2023
09 2023
Historique:
revised:
12
06
2023
received:
13
11
2022
accepted:
14
06
2023
medline:
22
8
2023
pubmed:
1
7
2023
entrez:
1
7
2023
Statut:
ppublish
Résumé
Previous studies have reported weak correlations between neurophysiological measurements and subjective severity of symptoms in carpal tunnel syndrome, with Pearson r ≤ 0.26. We hypothesize that this resulted in part from patient-to-patient variability in the assessment of subjective severity using tools such as the Boston Carpal Tunnel Questionnaire. To compensate for this, we aimed to assess within-patient differences in symptom and test result severity. In our study we used retrospective data from 13 005 patients with bilateral electrophysiological results and 790 patients with bilateral ultrasound imaging drawn from the Canterbury CTS database. Measures of neurophysiological (nerve conduction studies [NCS] grade) and anatomical (cross-sectional area on ultrasound) severity within individual patients were compared between the right and left hands, eliminating individual variation in the way in which patients interpret the questionnaire. There was a correlation found between right-hand NCS grade and symptom severity score (Pearson r = -0.302, P < .001, n = 13,005), but not between right-hand cross-sectional area and symptom severity (Pearson r = 0.058, P = .10, n = 790). In the within-subject analyses, there were significant correlations between symptoms and NCS grade (Pearson r = 0.6, P < .001, n = 6521) and between symptoms and cross-sectional area (Pearson r = 0.3. P < .001, n = 433). The simple correlation between symptomatic and electrophysiological severity was comparable with previous studies, but within-patient analysis revealed that the relationship was stronger than previously reported and strong enough to be clinically useful. The relationship between symptoms and cross-sectional area measurement on ultrasound imaging was weaker.
Types de publication
Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM
Pagination
264-268Informations de copyright
© 2023 Wiley Periodicals LLC.
Références
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