Effectiveness of an Invasive Physical Therapy Protocol in Carpal Tunnel Syndrome: Randomized Controlled Clinical Trial

NCT ID: NCT05527743

Last Updated: 2022-09-02

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

UNKNOWN

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

46 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2023-04-01

Study Completion Date

2024-12-01

Brief Summary

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Carpal Tunnel Syndrome (CTS) is the most common peripheral neuropathy due to entrapment, caused by compression of the median nerve as it passes under the transverse carpal ligament at the wrist. The prevalence of CTS is between 5% and 20% in the general population, according to the criteria used. It stands at 10% when following the criteria established by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health.

Within the prevalence, 1% are men and 7% women, with an incidence per year of 105 cases per 100,000 people. In 2019, the external consultant "statista" indicated that approximately 924,000 cases of CTS were registered in Spain. CTS generates large saturations in rehabilitation in primary care and in preoperative lists, for example, in 2008 there were 4,109 hospital admissions with a rate of 0.18 hospital discharges per thousand.

Risk factors for the development of CTS include female sex, older age, diabetes, menopause, hypothyroidism, obesity and pregnancy. Smoking appears to be a risk factor in the development of CTS. As well as wrist hyperflexion and hyperextension movements. The number of risk factors present progressively increases the prevalence of CTS.

CTS is characterized by the presence of neuropathic pain, nocturnal paresthesias and dysesthesia. It can be combined with loss of strength and atrophy of the tenar muscles. Therefore, the most severe cases produce very notable physical, psychological and economic consequences. For example, in the United States, CTS generates an annual primary care expenditure of $2 billion. Currently, the most recent clinical guidelines recommend the use of orthoses, exercises and manual therapy in the management of CTS, although there is no consensus on the most effective option. On the other hand, surgery is one of the most used therapeutic options. However, there is a great collapse of the health system and the waiting list for the intervention and it can take a long time.

The conservative therapeutic options used to date focus on the local approach to CTS at the wrist, and a recent systematic review has shown a high rate of surgical need (around 60%) at 3-year follow-up. This need for surgery may be reduced in the long term to 15% if the conservative approach includes maneuvers focused on desensitization of the central nervous system, performing an approach to the entire upper extremity. Current evidence suggests that CTS is a complex disorder, which presents sensitization mechanisms of the nervous system, and not only a peripheral nerve compression at the carpal tunnel level. Therefore, approaches and therapies with a central effect are hypothesized to be of future interest, in accordance with current nociceptive theories of CTS.

In the field of physiotherapy, novel techniques have been developed in recent years, such as ultrasound-guided percutaneous musculoskeletal electrolysis and ultrasound-guided percutaneous neuromodulation, in which different types of electrical current are applied through solid needles.

Different mechanisms of action have been associated with these invasive techniques, such as a potential effect on the activation of the descending pain inhibitory system pathways, the reduction of evoked motor potentials and an increase in intracortical inhibition, suggesting benefits in patients with central sensitization.

Invasive electrolysis and neuromodulation techniques have been applied in other studies at the nerve level, especially in the sciatic nerve at the piriformis and hamstrings level, in the popliteal fossa and in the foot. However, there is no study performed in patients with CTS.

To date, there is no clear consensus on the therapeutic approach to CTS, and the application of these invasive physiotherapy techniques is a novel approach that encompasses the local effect of treatment by means of local ultrasound-guided insertion of the needle in the carpal tunnel and the central neurophysiological effect produced by the current when it is applied. Taking into account the good empirical results found in private clinics and the precedents of studies carried out in other nerves, this treatment approach for outpatient application in primary care centers could relieve the demand for hospital care for patients referred for surgical treatment.

Detailed Description

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Carpal Tunnel Syndrome (CTS) is the most common peripheral neuropathy due to entrapment, caused by compression of the median nerve as it passes under the transverse carpal ligament at the wrist. The prevalence of CTS is between 5% and 20% in the general population, according to the criteria used. It stands at 10% when following the criteria established by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health.

Within the prevalence, 1% are men and 7% women, with an incidence per year of 105 cases per 100,000 people. In 2019, the external consultant "statista" indicated that approximately 924,000 cases of CTS were registered in Spain. CTS generates large saturations in rehabilitation in primary care and in preoperative lists, for example, in 2008 there were 4,109 hospital admissions with a rate of 0.18 hospital discharges per thousand.

Risk factors for the development of CTS include female sex, older age, diabetes, menopause, hypothyroidism, obesity and pregnancy. Smoking appears to be a risk factor in the development of CTS. As well as wrist hyperflexion and hyperextension movements. The number of risk factors present progressively increases the prevalence of CTS.

CTS is characterized by the presence of neuropathic pain, nocturnal paresthesias and dysesthesia. It can be combined with loss of strength and atrophy of the tenar muscles. Therefore, the most severe cases produce very notable physical, psychological and economic consequences. For example, in the United States, CTS generates an annual primary care expenditure of $2 billion. Currently, the most recent clinical guidelines recommend the use of orthoses, exercises and manual therapy in the management of CTS, although there is no consensus on the most effective option. On the other hand, surgery is one of the most used therapeutic options. However, there is a great collapse of the health system and the waiting list for the intervention and it can take a long time.

The conservative therapeutic options used to date focus on the local approach to CTS at the wrist, and a recent systematic review has shown a high rate of surgical need (around 60%) at 3-year follow-up. This need for surgery may be reduced in the long term to 15% if the conservative approach includes maneuvers focused on desensitization of the central nervous system, performing an approach to the entire upper extremity. Current evidence suggests that CTS is a complex disorder, which presents sensitization mechanisms of the nervous system, and not only a peripheral nerve compression at the carpal tunnel level. Therefore, approaches and therapies with a central effect are hypothesized to be of future interest, in accordance with current nociceptive theories of CTS.

In the field of physiotherapy, novel techniques have been developed in recent years, such as ultrasound-guided percutaneous musculoskeletal electrolysis and ultrasound-guided percutaneous neuromodulation, in which different types of electrical current are applied through solid needles.

Different mechanisms of action have been associated with these invasive techniques, such as a potential effect on the activation of the descending pain inhibitory system pathways, the reduction of evoked motor potentials and an increase in intracortical inhibition, suggesting benefits in patients with central sensitization.

Invasive electrolysis and neuromodulation techniques have been applied in other studies at the nerve level, especially in the sciatic nerve at the piriformis and hamstrings level, in the popliteal fossa and in the foot. However, there is no study performed in patients with CTS.

To date, there is no clear consensus on the therapeutic approach to CTS, and the application of these invasive physiotherapy techniques is a novel approach that encompasses the local effect of treatment by means of local ultrasound-guided insertion of the needle in the carpal tunnel and the central neurophysiological effect produced by the current when it is applied. Taking into account the good empirical results found in private clinics and the precedents of studies carried out in other nerves, this treatment approach for outpatient application in primary care centers could relieve the demand for hospital care for patients referred for surgical treatment.

Conditions

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Carpal Tunnel Syndrome

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

DOUBLE

Participants Outcome Assessors

Study Groups

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Invasive Physiotherapy

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Invasive Physiotherapy

Intervention Type OTHER

They will receive an invasive physiotherapy protocol of 3 sessions of percutaneous electrolysis and percutaneous neuromodulation guided by ultrasound, with a time margin of one week between the first and the second session and two weeks between the second and the third. Each session will last approximately 30 minutes. Each treatment session will consist of the application of 3 impacts of 3 seconds of 1.5mA intensity (1.5:3:3) (34), in a needle placed in an echoguided manner in the carpal tunnel in relation to the median nerve over the area of fibrosis or entrapment. Subsequently, a second needle will be placed ultrasound-guided at the level of the elbow crease in relation to the median nerve. A symmetric biphasic current with a frequency of 2Hz and a pulse width of 250µs (22,35) will be applied for 17 minutes (36), increasing the intensity of the current until a slight tolerable discomfort is produced in relation to the patient's symptomatology.

Sham Group

Group Type PLACEBO_COMPARATOR

Sham

Intervention Type OTHER

The participants of the study corresponding to the sham group will receive the application of the transcutaneous electrical stimulation sham technique (37), placing the patches in the same points where the needles are located in the percutaneous electrolysis and percutaneous neuromodulation technique, remaining in the supine position for the necessary time after the technique is performed, until 30 minutes are completed, thus ensuring that the evaluator does not know to which group each patient has been assigned (37). This technique has been studied as a sham technique for electrolysis and neuromodulation interventions (37).

Once the study is completed and if the results are better in the IF group, the subjects in the sham group will be offered to receive this treatment. The reason for this is to ensure that the entire sample ends up receiving a treatment that, a priori, should improve their functional capacities, thus guaranteeing one of the ethical principles of research.

Interventions

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Invasive Physiotherapy

They will receive an invasive physiotherapy protocol of 3 sessions of percutaneous electrolysis and percutaneous neuromodulation guided by ultrasound, with a time margin of one week between the first and the second session and two weeks between the second and the third. Each session will last approximately 30 minutes. Each treatment session will consist of the application of 3 impacts of 3 seconds of 1.5mA intensity (1.5:3:3) (34), in a needle placed in an echoguided manner in the carpal tunnel in relation to the median nerve over the area of fibrosis or entrapment. Subsequently, a second needle will be placed ultrasound-guided at the level of the elbow crease in relation to the median nerve. A symmetric biphasic current with a frequency of 2Hz and a pulse width of 250µs (22,35) will be applied for 17 minutes (36), increasing the intensity of the current until a slight tolerable discomfort is produced in relation to the patient's symptomatology.

Intervention Type OTHER

Sham

The participants of the study corresponding to the sham group will receive the application of the transcutaneous electrical stimulation sham technique (37), placing the patches in the same points where the needles are located in the percutaneous electrolysis and percutaneous neuromodulation technique, remaining in the supine position for the necessary time after the technique is performed, until 30 minutes are completed, thus ensuring that the evaluator does not know to which group each patient has been assigned (37). This technique has been studied as a sham technique for electrolysis and neuromodulation interventions (37).

Once the study is completed and if the results are better in the IF group, the subjects in the sham group will be offered to receive this treatment. The reason for this is to ensure that the entire sample ends up receiving a treatment that, a priori, should improve their functional capacities, thus guaranteeing one of the ethical principles of research.

Intervention Type OTHER

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Age equal or superior to 18 years old.
* Have a medical diagnosis of CTS, by a specialist of the Neurophysiology Service with confirmation of neurophysiological study, in any of its stages: mild, moderate or severe.
* Have access and be able (or have help) to use an online platform to conduct "meetings" with the health professional.
* Read the informed consent form and understand the objectives and conduct of the study.

Exclusion Criteria

* Be pending compensation or litigation for health problems.
* Receiving physiotherapy treatment in the region in the month prior to the study.
* Present severe diseases that may be related to the clinical results: malignancy or history of cancer, tumors or fractures in the region to be treated, blood dyscrasia, severe trauma in the previous 3 months, surgery in the region in the previous 12 months.
* To present contraindications to the therapeutic approach such as Belanophobia (33).
* Subjects who have received any of the procedures under study (percutaneous neuromodulation or percutaneous electrolysis technique).
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

90 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Universitat Internacional de Catalunya

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Jacobo Rodríguez Sanz

Principal Investigator

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Locations

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Universitat Internacional de Catalunya

Sant Cugat del Vallès, Barcelona, Spain

Site Status

Countries

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Spain

Central Contacts

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Jacobo Rodríguez-Sanz, PhD

Role: CONTACT

+34 636136789

Other Identifiers

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CFC22STC

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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