• Rev Med Interne · Jul 2020

    Review

    [Carpal tunnel syndrome: Rare causes and associated forms behind a common and stereotyped affection].

    • E Fournier.
    • Département de physiologie, faculté de médecine Pitié-Salpêtrière, Sorbonne université, 91, boulevard de l'Hôpital, 75013 Paris, France. Electronic address: emmanuel.fournier@upmc.fr.
    • Rev Med Interne. 2020 Jul 1; 41 (7): 451-458.

    AbstractCarpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) is too common a condition not to daily interact with the practitioner, if only because of its entanglement to other pathologies, causal or chance association. The typical symptomatology, with hand paresthesia and morning pain upon waking, is related to a median nerve injury in the confined space of the carpal tunnel, more often by local inflammation and tenosynovitis of the finger flexors (repetitive activity of the hands). SCC may be secondary to situations (pregnancy) or conditions (edema, hypothyroidism…), which exaggerate the ordinary pathophysiology or cause deposits in the channel (amyloidosis, mucopolysaccharidoses, etc.). Otherwise, SCC is favored by all neuropathies that cause nerve fragility (especially diabetes). It is sometimes the first sign of these various affections of which it can allow early diagnosis. Electroneuromyographic examination (ENMG) is a key examination to confirm the diagnosis (slowing of sensitive and motor conduction of the median nerve through the carpal tunnel, due to local demyelination), to look for a predisposing neuropathy and for signs of seriousness (amplitude reduction of electrophysiological signals) that indicate axonal loss. In SCC forms with only slowed conduction without sign of seriousness, a splint or infiltration treatment may be attempted. If this medical treatment does not bring healing, or if there are signs of seriousness or unbearable pains, a decompression surgery is indicated. Whether it is performed traditionally or endoscopically, it provides fast relief, even immediate.Copyright © 2020 Société Nationale Française de Médecine Interne (SNFMI). Published by Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.

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