Press Release
For more information, visit: http://www.interscience.wiley.com/journal/arthritis
Amy Molnar
(201) 748-8844/8852 (fax)
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Embargo Date:
February 3, 2005 at 12:01AM, EST
Arthritis & Rheumatism News Alert
Optimal Treatment of Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
One Year Study Finds Local Steroid Injection as Effective as Surgery for Symptomatic
Relief
Carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) is the most recognized occupational maladies
as well as one of the most reported. Marked by numbness, weakness, and pain
in the wrist and hand particularly the thumb and index finger, and frequently
shooting up the arm CTS occurs when the median nerve, which runs from the
forearm to the base of the palm, becomes compressed. This constriction or pinching
is commonly attributed to repetitive motion and stress. Yet, in spite of its
association with heavy computer use, carpal tunnel syndrome is not confined
to data entry workers. Butchers, mechanics, musicians, dental hygienists, tennis
players and golfers are vulnerable. According to recent studies, CTS affects
about 3 percent of the general population, whether on the job or at play. Women
are more likely than men to develop it. Individuals with rheumatoid arthritis
are also at high risk.
Despite the prevalence of CTS and its considerable economic impact in terms
of both worker absenteeism and compensation claims there is no universally
accepted therapy. Mild cases are usually left untreated. Moderate cases may
be treated with local injections of corticosteroids, if patients fail to respond
to splinting and anti-inflammatory drugs like ibuprofen. In severe cases, with
the threat of permanent loss of sensation, the preferred treatment is surgery.
Surgery, however, is often recommended to patients before trying less invasive
and less expensive treatments. Is surgery always the best course for carpal
tunnel syndrome's sufferers? A team of researchers in Madrid recently set out
to find the answer. The results of their clinical trial, published in the February
2005 issue of Arthritis & Rheumatism ( http://www.interscience.wiley.com/journal/arthritis),
suggest that local steroid injection is just as effective as surgery for the
long-term symptomatic relief of CTS for a year, at least and actually more
effective over the short term.
The research effort focused on the results of 163 wrists belonging to 101
patients 93 women, 8 men who were referred by their primary care physician
to a CTS unit specifically created for this study. All the patients had experienced
CTS symptoms most notably, nightly attacks of extreme tingling and burning
in the hand and fingers, which disrupted their sleep for at least 3 months.
Of the total wrists, 80 were randomly assigned to the standard surgical procedure:
decompression of the median nerve. The remaining 83 wrists were treated with
local steroid injection. Patients in both groups were similar in age the
median was 50 for the surgery group and 53 for the injection group as well
as in the duration and severity of their symptoms.
All wrists were evaluated 14 days after the initial treatment. At that time,
69 of the wrists that had been treated with steroids received a second local
injection. Researchers then assessed the symptoms of both groups at 3, 6, and
12 months, using visual analog scale scores to measure improvement. At the
3-month mark, 94 percent of the wrists in the injection group achieved significant
improvement a response of 20 percent or better for the nocturnal symptoms,
compared with 75 percent of wrists in the surgery group. At the 6-month mark,
85.5 percent of wrists in the injection group achieved a 20 percent or better
response for the nocturnal symptoms, compared with 76.3 percent in the surgery
group. At the 12-month mark, 69.9 percent of the wrists in the injection group
achieved a 20 percent or better response for the nocturnal symptoms, compared
with 70 percent in the surgery group. Throughout follow-up, results for two
other symptoms measured daily pain in the wrist area and self-perceived functional
impairment were similar.
This is the first randomized controlled clinical trial comparing the two
most common therapies for CTS, notes one of its authors, Dr. Domingo Ly-Pen. Our
findings suggest that both local steroid injections and surgical decompression
are highly effective in alleviating the symptoms of primary CTS at 12 months
of follow-up. Nevertheless, local injection seems superior to surgery in the
short term.
Also notably, more patients whose wrists were randomly assigned to surgery
rejected the treatment (11 wrists) than did those whose wrists were assigned
to injection (1 wrist). This finding coincides with our daily clinical practice, Dr.
Ly-Pen observes, in which patients usually prefer conservative therapies. Surgery
may still be the best course in severe cases of CTS, for avoiding loss of sensation
and improving function. This study, however, has important implications for
the effective, affordable, early treatment of carpal tunnel syndrome, an unfortunately
common condition of our times.
Article: Surgical Decompression Versus Local Steroid Injection in Carpal
Tunnel Syndrome: A One-Year, Prospective, Randomized, Open, Controlled Clinical
Trial, Domingo Ly-Pen, Jose-Luis Andreu, Gema de Blas, Alberto Sanchez-Olaso,
and Isabel Millan, Arthritis & Rheumatism , February 2005; 52:2;
pp. 612-619.