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This study will investigate whether symptomatic improvement following carpal tunnel corticosteroid injection can be correlated to symptomatic improvement following carpal tunnel release and therefore serve as a prognostic indicator.
Clinical question: Does response to corticosteroid injection in CTS predict outcomes of surgical treatment?
Secondary Questions:
A prospective cohort design study is the appropriate study design in order to measure the association between a predictor (response to injection) and outcome (response to surgery).
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Carpal Tunnel Syndrome is a painful condition that is caused by compression of the median nerve in the wrist. Symptoms usually are pain, weakness, or numbness in the hand and wrist, radiating up the arm. Corticosteroid injections have been utilized in the conservative management of carpal tunnel syndrome for several decades. They have been shown to be relatively safe with a very low reported complication rate. Recent efforts in the literature have shown they are efficacious for a majority of patients although their effects are usually transient. Several studies have attempted to show a predictive value of corticosteroid injection with regard to who will ultimately benefit from carpal tunnel release. There is a trend towards positive predictability with several retrospective studies showing that patients who have a clinical benefit from steroid injection are more likely to have a successful outcome from carpal tunnel release. Carpal tunnel release remains the definitive treatment option for carpal tunnel syndrome, and a clinical test which could give the practitioner and patient additional information regarding likelihood of successful outcome of surgery would be a valuable prognostic tool.
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200 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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