MedPath

Efficacy of Ultrasound-Guided Hydrodissection in Carpal Tunnel Syndrome

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Musculoskeletal Diseases
Median Nerve Disease
Ultrasound-Guided Injection
Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
Interventions
Procedure: Ultrasound-guided Hydrodissection (HD) with 5 cc 5% Dextrose
Procedure: Ultrasound-guided Hydrodissection (HD) with 10 cc 5% Dextrose
Procedure: Ultrasound-guided Hydrodissection (HD) with 5 cc Normal Saline
Procedure: Ultrasound-guided Hydrodissection (HD) with 10 cc Normal Saline
Registration Number
NCT05222126
Lead Sponsor
Afyonkarahisar Health Sciences University
Brief Summary

The aim of our study is to determine the effectiveness of US-guided hydrodissection of the median nerve in different contents and volumes in patients diagnosed with mild to moderate carpal tunnel syndrome.

Detailed Description

Carpal tunnel syndrome is the most common form of entrapment neuropathies. Anatomically, the roof of the carpal tunnel consists of carpal bones, it is located under the transverse carpal ligament, and there are 9 tendon packs of the forearm flexors and the median nerve. Clinically, sensory (paresthesia and hypoesthesia), motor deficits and pain occur in the distribution of the median nerve secondary to mechanical compression and local ischemia.

Conservative treatment options are available for patients diagnosed with mild and moderate CTS as a result of CTS classification. Treatment options for symptom relief include physical therapy applications, splinting, and wrist injections. Among local injection treatments; applications such as corticosteroids and local anesthetics are included.

Ultrasound-guided injections of peripheral nerves are generally superior to blind injections as they prevent damage to critical vascular structures in the surrounding tissue accompanying the nerves and reduce the risk of intraneural injections.

Ultrasound (US) guided hydrodissection of peripheral nerves (HD) is a technique that uses high-resolution ultrasound-guided fluid injection to separate nerves from a surrounding or adjacent structure, usually fascia. The aim is to restore function to the nerve and to release soft tissue adhesions that cause entrapment.

This investigation was designed double-blind prospective randomized study. Participants were randomized into 4 groups: Ultrasound-guided Hydrodissection (HD) with 5 cc 5% dextrose, Ultrasound-guided Hydrodissection (HD) with 5 cc normal saline, Ultrasound-guided Hydrodissection (HD) with 10 cc 5% dextrose, Ultrasound-guided Hydrodissection (HD) with 10 cc normal saline.

Ultrasonographic evaluation and ultrasound-guided injection were planned to be performed with the 10-18-MHz linear probe of the MyLab 70 (Esaote, Genova, Italy) device by a physician experienced in US. It was designed in such a way that the physician was blind to the clinical information of the patients and the injected material.

As evaluation parameters, Visual Analogue Scale (VAS), Boston Carpal Tunnel Syndrome Questionnaire (BCTQ), Cross-sectional Area of Median Nerve (CSA), Hand and finger grip strength assessment, and Electrophysiological assessment will be evaluated. It was planned that the evaluations were made and recorded by a blinded physician to the groups at the beginning of the treatment, at the 1st month and at the 3rd month controls.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
80
Inclusion Criteria
  • Presence of symptoms of carpal tunnel syndrome, including nocturnal, postural, or movement-related paresthesias +/- pain in the median nerve distribution area in the hand for more than 3 months
  • Presence of mild to moderate carpal tunnel syndrome proven by electrophysiological study
  • Loss of sensation with numbness in the median nerve-innervated areas of the hand, weakness of the median nerve-innervated thenar muscles
  • Positive Phalen test and/or Tinel sign
Exclusion Criteria
  • Patients who can mimic the diagnosis of carpal tunnel syndrome, such as cervical radiculopathy, polyneuropathy, brachial plexopathy, thoracic outlet syndrome
  • Patients who have had an injection into the carpal tunnel in the last 6 months
  • Patients with thenar muscle atrophy
  • History of Carpal tunnel surgery
  • Regular use of systemic nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and corticosteroids
  • Pregnancy
  • Rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, gout, systemic sclerosis, dermatomyositis, polymyositis
  • Presence of malignancy
  • Presence of active infection

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Ultrasound-guided Hydrodissection (HD) with 5 cc 5% DextroseUltrasound-guided Hydrodissection (HD) with 5 cc 5% DextroseThe median nerve will be defined at the proximal entrance of the carpal tunnel (scaphoid-pisiform plane). Under the ulnar approach with the in-plane technique, it was planned to hydrodissect the median nerve using 5 cc of 5% dextrose.
Ultrasound-guided Hydrodissection (HD) with 10 cc 5% DextroseUltrasound-guided Hydrodissection (HD) with 10 cc 5% DextroseThe median nerve will be defined at the proximal entrance of the carpal tunnel (scaphoid-pisiform plane). Under the ulnar approach with the in-plane technique, it was planned to hydrodissect the median nerve , using 10 cc 5% dextrose.
Ultrasound-guided Hydrodissection (HD) with 5 cc Normal SalineUltrasound-guided Hydrodissection (HD) with 5 cc Normal SalineThe median nerve will be defined at the proximal entrance of the carpal tunnel (scaphoid-pisiform plane). Under the ulnar approach with the in-plane technique, it was planned to hydrodissect the median nerve , using 5 cc normal saline.
Ultrasound-guided Hydrodissection (HD) with 10 cc Normal SalineUltrasound-guided Hydrodissection (HD) with 10 cc Normal SalineThe median nerve will be defined at the proximal entrance of the carpal tunnel (scaphoid-pisiform plane). Under the ulnar approach with the in-plane technique, it was planned to hydrodissect the median nerve from , using 10 cc normal saline.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Visual Analog Scale (VAS)up to 12th week

Pain intensity was measured with visual analogue scale for pain (0-10 mm; 0 means no pain, 10 means severe pain) which is used to measure musculoskeletal pain with very good reliability and validity.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Electrophysiological Evaluationup to 12th week

Antidromic sensory nerve conduction velocity and distal motor latency of the median nerve will be measured in all patients. All measurements will be made 3 times and the average value will be taken. To diagnose CTS electrophysiologically; The median nerve peak sensory conduction velocity recorded antidromically from the second finger should be slower than 41.25 m/sec, the conduction velocity should be slower than 34 m/sec in the mixed nerve conduction study in the palm-wrist segment (8 cm), and/or recordings from the APB (abductor pollicis brevis) muscle DML (distal motor latency) was determined to be longer than 3.8 ms with stimulation of the median nerve from the wrist segment (5 cm).

Hand and Finger Grip Strength Assessmentup to 12th week

The hand grip strength of the participants will be measured with the "Jamar Hand Dynamometer". Measurements will be made with the shoulder in adduction and neutral rotation adjacent to the trunk, elbow 90 degrees flexed, wrist 0-30 degrees dorsiflexion and 0-15 degrees ulnar deviation with thumb up. Finger grip strength will be evaluated with the "Jamar Digital Pinchmeter". Patients will be placed in the sitting position with the wrist in 90° flexion and the forearm in the neutral position. Measurements will be made bilaterally in three different positions as lateral, palmar and fingertip grips. Patients will be asked to squeeze with maximum force and each measurement will be made three times, and their averages will be recorded in kg. The dynamometer has a dual scale readout which displays isometric grip force from 0-90 kg. Higher scores means better grip strength.

Boston Carpal Tunnel Syndrome Questionnaire (BCTQ)up to 12th week

The Boston Carpal Tunnel Syndrome Questionnaire (BCTQ) is a frequently used questionnaire for CTS that includes 2 components. It evaluates for grading under two sub-headings: symptom severity scale (11 questions) and functional status scale (8 questions). Scores range from 0 to 5 for each question; 0 represents no difficulty during the activity, 5 represents extremely severe dysfunction.

Cross-sectional area of the Median Nerve (CSA)up to 12th week

The cross-sectional area (CSA) of the median nerve will be used for analysis by the mean value of 3 measurements made with an electronic caliper at the same level as the injection site (scaphoid-pisiform level).

CSA values increase as clinical findings worsen.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Afyonkarahisar Health Sciences University

🇹🇷

Afyonkarahi̇sar, Turkey

© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by MedPath