Comparison of Interventions in Patients With Carpal Tunnel Syndrome

NCT ID: NCT04347746

Last Updated: 2020-11-27

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

72 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2019-09-12

Study Completion Date

2020-06-12

Brief Summary

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This study aims to compare two types of intervention (stretching and myofascial manipulation) in the treatment of individuals with bilateral idiopathic carpal tunnel syndrome. This comparison applies to two groups, the clinical group is composed of patients of mild or moderate degree, whereas the surgical group is composed of a patient with at least one hand in severe degree and interventions are made after surgery.

Detailed Description

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Using clinical criteria and ENMG, individuals will be divided into a clinical group when they have a mild and / or moderate degree of involvement in the hands and a surgical group when the impairment intensity is severe in at least one hand.

The individuals in the clinical group will be randomized into two groups, with one group starting with stretching and a second group starting with hook-assisted myofascial manipulation. After four weeks of initial therapy and one week of wash-out the assessment tests described above will be applied. The groups will be inverted, maintaining the duration and frequency of the previous stage of the proposed therapies. After four weeks with a week of wash-out the tests will be reapplied in order to evaluate the therapeutic response.

Individuals with severe idiopathic CTS will undergo surgery using a standard open technique with local anesthesia and after four weeks, randomization will be made for postoperative treatment on both hands by stretching or myofascial manipulation in the same manner described for the clinical group.

Questionnaires will be applied in order to understand the patient's symptoms, functions, pain and quality of life. In addition, tests will be used to assess hand strength, sensitivity and hand ability.

Conditions

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Carpal Tunnel Syndrome Carpal Tunnel Syndrome Bilateral

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

CROSSOVER

Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

TRIPLE

Participants Investigators Outcome Assessors

Study Groups

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Clinical group

Individuals with bilateral idiopathic CTS with clinical criteria and mild to moderate ENMG severity and symptom evolution time above six months.

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

stretching physiotherapy

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

A booklet with images and a description of all movements to be performed during therapy will be offered to patients. The booklet illustrates the movements for stretching the upper limbs divided as follows: three movements for the neck, three movements for the arms and forearms and four movements for the hands.

The therapy will be carried out twice a week at the Unopar research center, under the guidance of a physiotherapist trained in technique and supervision by a senior therapist. At the end of each movement, the individual is instructed to maintain the position for 40 seconds.

Patients will be instructed to appear in comfortable clothes and the environment will have favorable conditions.

Myofascial therapy

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Myofascial therapy will be performed on the upper limbs, pectoral and dorsal regions with the aid of hooks (instrument assisted soft-tissue mobilization). In the supine position, the pectoral muscles will be manipulated (infracromial, external, axillary-claviculopectoral fossa), biceps brachii (short head, long and forearm insertion), round pronator, anterior forearm musculature (compartment of the radial extensor of the long carpus and brevis, finger extensor and ulnar carpal extensor). In lateral decubitus the deltoid muscle in the anterior, middle and posterior portions. In the prone position, the trapezius muscle (in its cervical, scapular and nuchal insertions), scapular levator muscle, great dorsal muscle (in its lateral insertions) and triceps brachii muscle. The hook manipulation time is two minutes of execution for each muscle mentioned above, making a total time of each section of forty minutes. There will be two weekly sessions with an interval between forty-eight hours.

Surgical group

Individuals with bilateral idiopathic CTS with clinical criteria and severe ENMG in at least one hand and symptom evolution time above six months. These will be submitted to surgery on the severe hand and if equal severity on both hands, the dominant hand will be operated, with the patient's consent.

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

stretching physiotherapy

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

A booklet with images and a description of all movements to be performed during therapy will be offered to patients. The booklet illustrates the movements for stretching the upper limbs divided as follows: three movements for the neck, three movements for the arms and forearms and four movements for the hands.

The therapy will be carried out twice a week at the Unopar research center, under the guidance of a physiotherapist trained in technique and supervision by a senior therapist. At the end of each movement, the individual is instructed to maintain the position for 40 seconds.

Patients will be instructed to appear in comfortable clothes and the environment will have favorable conditions.

Myofascial therapy

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Myofascial therapy will be performed on the upper limbs, pectoral and dorsal regions with the aid of hooks (instrument assisted soft-tissue mobilization). In the supine position, the pectoral muscles will be manipulated (infracromial, external, axillary-claviculopectoral fossa), biceps brachii (short head, long and forearm insertion), round pronator, anterior forearm musculature (compartment of the radial extensor of the long carpus and brevis, finger extensor and ulnar carpal extensor). In lateral decubitus the deltoid muscle in the anterior, middle and posterior portions. In the prone position, the trapezius muscle (in its cervical, scapular and nuchal insertions), scapular levator muscle, great dorsal muscle (in its lateral insertions) and triceps brachii muscle. The hook manipulation time is two minutes of execution for each muscle mentioned above, making a total time of each section of forty minutes. There will be two weekly sessions with an interval between forty-eight hours.

Interventions

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stretching physiotherapy

A booklet with images and a description of all movements to be performed during therapy will be offered to patients. The booklet illustrates the movements for stretching the upper limbs divided as follows: three movements for the neck, three movements for the arms and forearms and four movements for the hands.

The therapy will be carried out twice a week at the Unopar research center, under the guidance of a physiotherapist trained in technique and supervision by a senior therapist. At the end of each movement, the individual is instructed to maintain the position for 40 seconds.

Patients will be instructed to appear in comfortable clothes and the environment will have favorable conditions.

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Myofascial therapy

Myofascial therapy will be performed on the upper limbs, pectoral and dorsal regions with the aid of hooks (instrument assisted soft-tissue mobilization). In the supine position, the pectoral muscles will be manipulated (infracromial, external, axillary-claviculopectoral fossa), biceps brachii (short head, long and forearm insertion), round pronator, anterior forearm musculature (compartment of the radial extensor of the long carpus and brevis, finger extensor and ulnar carpal extensor). In lateral decubitus the deltoid muscle in the anterior, middle and posterior portions. In the prone position, the trapezius muscle (in its cervical, scapular and nuchal insertions), scapular levator muscle, great dorsal muscle (in its lateral insertions) and triceps brachii muscle. The hook manipulation time is two minutes of execution for each muscle mentioned above, making a total time of each section of forty minutes. There will be two weekly sessions with an interval between forty-eight hours.

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* bilateral idiopathic CTS above six months of symptomatology;
* with clinical criteria and ENMG for indication of clinical or surgical treatment;
* who have no history of gabapentin allergy.

Exclusion Criteria

* Individuals with CTS for other reasons, such as pregnancy, arthritis, hypothyroidism, diabetes mellitus, trauma, expansive tunnel damage, amyloids, sarcoidosis, multiple myeloma, and leukemia.
* Individuals with conditions that can simulate CTS, such as carpometacarpal thumb arthritis, cervical radiculopathy mainly of the sixth cervical root level, radial flexor carpal tenosynovitis and central disorders such as multiple sclerosis and cerebral infarction.
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Sponsors

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Universidade Norte do ParanĂ¡

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Locations

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Unopar

Londrina, ParanĂ¡, Brazil

Site Status

Countries

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Brazil

Other Identifiers

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sg01

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id