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. 2000 Dec 5;24(6):361–363. doi: 10.1007/s002640000189

Endoscopic carpal tunnel release and nerve conduction studies

Hiroyasu Ueno 1, Kazuo Kaneko 1, Toshihiko Taguchi 1, Yasunori Fuchigami 1, Hideaki Fujimoto 1, Shinya Kawai 1
PMCID: PMC3619929  PMID: 11294432

Abstract.

We investigated the outcome of endoscopic carpal tunnel release (ECTR) for patients with carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) in comparison with the results of preoperative nerve conduction studies. The compound muscle action potential (CMAP) of the abductor pollicis brevis muscle (APB) and the second lumbrical muscle (L2) was recorded following median nerve stimulation at the wrist. A total of 38 hands in 35 patients were classified into four categories. Hands with a similarly prolonged distal motor latency for the APB and L2 were classified as type 1 (n=25), while those with a more prolonged distal motor latency for the APB than for the L2 (>0.7 ms) were classified as type 2 (n=10). Hands with a CMAP for the APB, but not L2, were classified as type 3 (n=1), and hands with no CMAP for either the APB or L2 were classified as type 4 (n=2). After ECTR, all of the type 1 and 2 hands were improved. Patients with type 3 and type 4 hands did not show satisfactory improvement, which may have been due to anatomical variation of the recurrent motor branch of the median nerve.

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Electronic Publication


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