Position of the wrist associated with the lowest carpal-tunnel pressure
- 1 November 1995
- journal article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery
- Vol. 77 (11) , 1695-1699
- https://doi.org/10.2106/00004623-199511000-00008
Abstract
West carpal-tunnel pressure, twenty control subjects and four patients who had carpal tunnel syndrome were evaluated with use of a new, dynamic method that continuously measures carpal tunnel pressure throughout the range of motion of the wrist. The pressure was measured by means of a pressure transducer connected to a flexible catheter that had been inserted into the carpal canal. The position of the wrist was measured simultaneously with use of a two-axis electrogoniometer. Aided by a computer monitor that displayed a moving line of real-time carpal-tunnel pressure, each subject was instructed to move the wrist throughout the range of motion and to adjust it to the position that corresponded to the lowest carpal-tunnel pressure. For the control subjects, the lowest carpal-tunnel pressure averaged 8 +/- 4 millimeters of mercury (1.07 +/- 0.53 kilopascals), and the average position of the wrist associated with the lowest pressure was 2 +/- 9 degrees of extension and 2 +/- 6 degrees of ulnar deviation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) Increased carpal-tunnel pressure has been implicated in the pathophysiology of carpal tunnel syndrome, but it is not known whether splints that immobilize the wrist in a functional position of extension minimize carpal tunnel pressure. To determine the position of the wrist that results in the lowest carpal-tunnel pressure, twenty control subjects and four patients who had carpal tunnel syndrome were evaluated with use of a new, dynamic method that continuously measures carpal tunnel pressure throughout the range of motion of the wrist. The pressure was measured by means of a pressure transducer connected to a flexible catheter that had been inserted into the carpal canal. The position of the wrist was measured simultaneously with use of a two-axis electrogoniometer. Aided by a computer monitor that displayed a moving line of real-time carpal-tunnel pressure, each subject was instructed to move the wrist throughout the range of motion and to adjust it to the position that corresponded to the lowest carpal-tunnel pressure. For the control subjects, the lowest carpal-tunnel pressure averaged 8 +/- 4 millimeters of mercury (1.07 +/- 0.53 kilopascals), and the average position of the wrist associated with the lowest pressure was 2 +/- 9 degrees of extension and 2 +/- 6 degrees of ulnar deviation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) Copyright © 1995 by The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Incorporated...Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- Predictive factors in the non-surgical treatment of carpal tunnel syndromeJournal of Hand Surgery (European Volume), 1990
- Carpal-tunnel pressureActa Orthopaedica, 1989
- Carpal Tunnel Pressures and Wrist Position in Patients with Collesʼ FracturesPublished by Wolters Kluwer Health ,1984
- Pressure and Nerve Lesion in the Carpal TunnelActa Orthopaedica, 1983
- The Acute Carpal Tunnel SyndromeClinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, 1981
- Aetiology, Diagnosis, and Treatment of Paraesthesiae in the HandsBMJ, 1960
- Treatment of the Carpal-tunnel SyndromeBMJ, 1960
- ACROPARqSTHESIq AND THE CARPALTUNNEL SYNDROMEThe Lancet, 1957
- COMPRESSION OF MEDIAN NERVE IN CARPAL TUNNELThe Lancet, 1947
- SPONTANEOUS COMPRESSION OF BOTH MEDIAN NERVES IN THE CARPAL TUNNEL SIX CASES TREATED SURGICALLYThe Lancet, 1947