2023
DOI: 10.1002/mus.27924
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Do nerve conduction studies or ultrasound imaging correlate more closely with subjective symptom severity in carpal tunnel syndrome?

Sarah N. Fargaly,
Jeremy D. P. Bland

Abstract: Introduction/AimsPrevious studies have reported weak correlations between neurophysiological measurements and subjective severity of symptoms in carpal tunnel syndrome, with Pearson r ≤ 0.26. We hypothesize that this resulted in part from patient‐to‐patient variability in the assessment of subjective severity using tools such as the Boston Carpal Tunnel Questionnaire. To compensate for this, we aimed to assess within‐patient differences in symptom and test result severity.MethodsIn our study we used retrospect… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…It expects patients to interpret for themselves what is meant by 'mild' or 'moderate' symptoms resulting in marked variability in the way the questions are answered from patient to patient. If a withinsubject analysis is carried out, looking at the difference in symptom severity scale (SSS) scores between the right and left hands of individuals with bilateral CTS, and comparing that to the difference in NCS grades between the right and left hands, it becomes apparent that the correlation between symptom severity and physiological severity is in fact much stronger than had been thought (Figure 5) (Fargaly and Bland, 2023).…”
Section: Ordinalitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It expects patients to interpret for themselves what is meant by 'mild' or 'moderate' symptoms resulting in marked variability in the way the questions are answered from patient to patient. If a withinsubject analysis is carried out, looking at the difference in symptom severity scale (SSS) scores between the right and left hands of individuals with bilateral CTS, and comparing that to the difference in NCS grades between the right and left hands, it becomes apparent that the correlation between symptom severity and physiological severity is in fact much stronger than had been thought (Figure 5) (Fargaly and Bland, 2023).…”
Section: Ordinalitymentioning
confidence: 99%