Cooling modifies mixed median and ulnar palmar studies in carpal tunnel syndrome

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Abstract

Temperature is an important and common variable that modifies nerve conduction study parameters in practice. Here we compare the effect of cooling on the mixed palmar median to ulnar negative peak-latency difference (PMU) in electrodiagnosis of carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS). Controls were 22 subjects (19 women, mean age 42.1 years, 44 hands). Patients were diagnosed with mild symptomatic CTS (25 women, mean age 46.6 years, 34 hands). PMU was obtained at the usual temperature, >32°C, and after wrist/hand cooling to <27°C in ice water. After cooling, there was a significantly greater increase in PMU and mixed ulnar palmar latency in patients versus controls. We concluded that cooling significantly modifies the PMU. We propose that the latencies of compressed nerve overreact to cooling and that this response could be a useful tool for incipient CTS electrodiagnosis. There was a significant latency overreaction of the ulnar nerve to cooling in CTS patients. We hypothesize that subclinical ulnar nerve compression is associated with CTS.

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De Araújo, R. G. M., & Kouyoumdjian, J. A. (2007). Cooling modifies mixed median and ulnar palmar studies in carpal tunnel syndrome. Arquivos de Neuro-Psiquiatria, 65(3 B), 779–782. https://doi.org/10.1590/s0004-282x2007000500008

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