Carpal Tunnel Syndrome - Conservative Tests & Treatments
Carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) is a devastating injury that
affects more than 8 million people in the United States and
continues to increase each and every year.
Carpal tunnel syndrome is one of many repetitive strain injuries
(RSI's) that are everywhere; homes, offices, assembly lines,
grocery stores, book clubs, construction sites, dental offices,
everywhere! Because carpal tunnel syndrome is so commonplace,
and its effects so devastating, it is important to be
knowledgeable of how it occurs, what its symptoms are, the
testing methods used and what treatment options are available,
as the prevention of any injury, especially carpal tunnel,
begins with education.
Carpal tunnel syndrome is a disorder affecting the median nerve,
which supplies function to the thumb, index, middle and one half
of the ring finger. Usually the symptoms are most prevalent in
the thumb, index and middle fingers (Sometimes one-half of the
ring finger) and include numbness, tingling, paresthesia (pins
and needles), pain and tightness in the front of the hand, wrist
and forearm. These symptoms do not have to occur simultaneously,
and may only affect one finger one day and then three fingers a
few days later.
If a doctor provides a carpal tunnel diagnoses and the symptoms
are in the ring and little fingers, it is NOT carpal tunnel
syndrome! The ulnar nerve, not the median nerve, supplies
function to the ring and little finger. Repetitive strain
disorders affecting these two fingers are usually either Guyon's
syndrome, entrapment of the ulnar nerve in the guyon's canal at
the wrist junction, or cubital tunnel syndrome, entrapment of
the ulnar nerve at the elbow junction. This is a common mistake
made by many, many physicians and is completely inexcusable as
they often recommend surgery for the patient, causing the
patient to undergo an unnecessary procedure, and what makes it
worse, for the wrong disorder!
If symptoms of carpal tunnel syndrome do arise, doctors will
recommend that a nerve conduction velocity (NCV) test or an
Electromoyogram (EMG) be performed to see if carpal tunnel
syndrome truly exists. These tests are often painful to the
individual being tested, very expensive, and often give false
positives and false negatives. This is why it is recommended
that manual carpal tunnel tests be performed in order to obtain
a more accurate (and much cheaper) diagnosis. Manual carpal
tunnel tests take no longer than 10 minutes, have a high
accuracy rate, are painless and are very cheap in comparison to
the NCV and EMG tests.
The recommended manual carpal tunnel tests consist of the
following: