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Cheatography

Carpal Tunnel Syndrome (CTS) Cheat Sheet (DRAFT) by

CTS management, presentation etc.

This is a draft cheat sheet. It is a work in progress and is not finished yet.

Anatomy

- Tendons of FDS, FDP, median nerve, FPL pass under the flexor retina­culum
- Palmar cutaneous branch of ulnar, PL tendon, ulnar artery and nerve and palmar cutaneous branch of median nerve pass over the carpal tunnel

Demogr­aphics

Most common nerve entrapment
- Females more likely to be affected than males
- More prevalent in white adults
- More common in dominant hand
- Rare in developing countries (work is not as repeti­tive)

Risk Factors

- Prolonged wrist flexio­n/e­xte­nsion
- Repetitive wrist movements
- Exposure to vibrat­ion­/cold
- Diabetes
- Hypoth­yro­idism
- RA
- Increased BMI
- Renal disease
- Thicken transverse ligament
- Short stature
- Trauma
- OA
- Pregnancy
- CONSIDER ISCHEMIA (CAD)

Presen­tation

- Paraes­thesia in palmar 3 1/2 fingers (median nerve)
- Night symptoms (increased hand volume) - patient complains of having to "wake up and shake it off"
- Pain over carpal tunnel
- Patients often think their whole hand is numb (poor locali­sation)
- Pain can refer to the elbow
- Palm symptoms indicate higher up involv­ement (pronator teres, TOS) as palmar cutaneous branch travels outside of the carpal tunnel
- Symptoms aggravated by gripping activities
- Hand weakne­ss/­atrophy may occur of the hand (thenar - ape hand)
- Patient complains of dropping things (decreased sensation)
- May have autonomic symptoms (tight swollen feeling, skin colour changes, hand temper­ature changes
- Hypert­onicity of Cx, scalene, pecs, pronator and wrist flexors
- ROM may not be affected but can reproduce complaint in flexio­n/e­xte­nsion - consider lunate
- Limited active thumb abduction
- Look for cutaneous findings (ulcer­ations, bliste­ring, sclero­dac­tyly, nail dystrophy)
- +ve Tinels, Phalens , Manual Carpal compre­ssion (most sensitive)
- Numbness of 5th digit/­dorsum , consider neuropathy of alternate origin
- Weakness in LOAF muscles (1st and 2nd lumbri­cals, Opponens pollicis, Abductor pollicis brevis, Flexor pollicis brevis) - Pinch grip
- Consider double crush - Cervical arthro­path, Cx disc, TOS, Pronator syndrome
- Consider other structures - ligament of Struthers, lacertus fibrosis
Bilateral hand involv­ement - central cord lesion until proven otherwise (MRI)

CPR

Least 4 of the 5 findings:
Shaking hands to relieve symptoms
Wrist rate >.67 (thickness to the width)
Symptom severity scale >1.9
Diminished sensation in thumb
Age >45 years old

Imaging

- Imaging only needed if bony compre­ssion is suspected
- MRI can be used to determine Cx radicu­lop­ath­y/soft tissue pathology
- US (more sensitive than MRI)
- EMG

DDx

- Cx radicu­lopathy
- TOS
- Compar­tment syndrome
- Diabetic neuropathy
- Latera­l/m­edial epicon­dylitis
- MS
- Regional pain syndrome
- SOL - Flexor tenosy­nov­iti­s/g­ang­lions

Management

- Myofascial release of forearm, wrist and hand - pronator, wrist flexors and carpal tunnel
- Median nerve flossing
- SMT of Cx or carpal restri­ctions
- Kinesi­otape
- Splinting (night pain)
- Home exercsies - Cx spine, scalene, pecs, pronator and wrist flexors, chin retrac­tion, carpal tunnel mobili­sation, median nerve glide and floss
- Advise rest - avoidance of repetitive wrist flexio­n/e­xte­nsion
- Vitamin B6
- Weight loss if obese
- Patients with signif­icant motor defici­ts/not improving with conser­vative care consider referral for inject­ion­s/s­urgery
Factors of success of conser­vative care:
1.Age >50 years
2. Duration >10 years
3. Constant paraes­thesia
4. Stenosing flexor tenosy­novitis
5. +ve Phalens test in >30 seconds
>2 factors - conser­vative management successful in 83% of cases
if 3 - 7% success
if 4 or 5 - 0% success