Internal NeurolysisVersus Ligament Division in Carpal Tunnel Syndrome Surgery

Background: Carpal tunnel syndrome is a compression neuropathy of median nerve at the wrist underneath the flexor retinaculum ligament. It is extremely more common in females than males and usually responds to conservative line of treatment and surgery is recommended  after failure of the conservat...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Diyala Journal of Medicine
Main Authors: Abdulrahman Saeed Ahmed, Yasin Thamer Hussein
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: College of medicine/ University of Diyala 2018-08-01
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Online Access:https://www.djm.uodiyala.edu.iq/index.php/djm/article/view/109
Description
Summary:Background: Carpal tunnel syndrome is a compression neuropathy of median nerve at the wrist underneath the flexor retinaculum ligament. It is extremely more common in females than males and usually responds to conservative line of treatment and surgery is recommended  after failure of the conservative treatment . Objective: To evaluate the effect of internal neurolysis on the clinical outcome of carpal tunnel surgery. Patients and Methods: Forty-eight  patients with clinically proved carpal tunnel syndrome were divided into two equal groups; group A were submitted to division of flexor retinaculum ligament only while group B underwent internal neurolysis in addition to division of  flexor retinaculum. The two groups have been  compared postoperatively on clinical basis for an average period of (4) months. The study had been done prospectively in the period from January  2014 to August 2016 in Ba´quba Teaching Hospital. Results: All the cases had beensatisfied with the outcome  of surgery in both groups,with recurrence in one case only in group A which responded well to conservative treatment. Conclusion: There was no significant difference  in the outcome of both groups in which the addition of internal neurolysis is not necessary and it had no striking effect on the outcome of carpal tunnel surgical decompression.
ISSN:2219-9764
2617-8982