Diffusion Tensor Imaging of the Median Nerve Before and After Carpal Tunnel Corticosteroid Injection in Patients With Carpal Tunnel Syndrome: Feasibility Study

NCT03299361 · Status: COMPLETED · Type: OBSERVATIONAL · Enrollment: 12

Last updated 2017-10-03

No results posted yet for this study

Summary

Carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) is the most common nerve compression disorder in the upper extremity. Therapy for carpal tunnel syndrome includes physical and occupational therapy, the use of splints and other local measures, and corticosteroid injection into the carpal tunnel. When these measures fail, open surgical release is considered the next step. Although the main disadvantage of corticosteroid injection is that symptoms are often short-lived relief and partial relief, it may not provide a permanent solution, corticosteroid injections are chosen because of lower level of invasiveness, faster recovery, and ease of the technique.

Diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging (DTI) reveals tissue microstructure based on random movements of water molecules. The measured diffusion-weighted images are further analyzed for parameter images that describe different characteristics of diffusion: apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) is an absolute measure of the strength of diffusion, and fractional anisotropy (FA) describes the asymmetry of the diffusion direction due to tissue structures. Because the axonal cell membrane and the myelin sheath in nerve fibers prevent diffusion in the direction which is perpendicular to their fascicles, resulting in the isotropy of the diffusion of water molecules being lost. DTI is the only method which can give an indirect view of the microstructure of nervous tissue in addition to the pathway of the fibers.

DTI has been applied to study peripheral nerves, to demonstrate the feasibility of the method and to study nerve entrapment in carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS). The previous studies have demonstrated a decrease in FA in patients with CTS compared to healthy volunteers. The DTI parameters of the median nerve have revealed significant increase of FA and decrease in ADC with complete symptom relief 6 months after carpal tunnel release. However, Hiltunen et al. have demonstrated a significant decrease in ADC but no alter in FA in patients received open carpal tunnel release 1 year later and felt complete symptoms relief. By means of open carpal tunnel release, follow-up recordings were made at least 6 months after the operation to ensure time for post-operative tissue recovery. As a result, the investigators still do not understand the relevance between the parameters of DTI to symptoms relief in CTS patients receiving conservative treatment.

Different from carpal tunnel release, steroid injections are popular technique for CTS treatment and are believed to reduce perineural inflammation or soft tissue swelling, and may stabilize the neural membrane, thus limiting the ephaptic transmission in ischemic nerve fibers which causes symptoms. Corticosteroid injections can provide a rapid symptom relief at 2 weeks follow up. However, there is no report addressing the relation of functional change of median nerve at several anatomic locations to the symptom relief of CTS. Here the investigators monitored, by means of DTI, median nerve integrity in CTS patients before and after corticosteroid injection. This information may help to explain the hypothesis regarding the effect of corticosteroid to the median nerve, to identify which anatomic location of median nerve relevant to the symptom relief of CTS after corticosteroid injection, and be useful for the clinical follow-up of patients with nerve entrapments following conservative treatment.

Conditions

  • Carpal Tunnel Syndrome

Interventions

OTHER

Magnetic resonance image (MRI)

Diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging (DTI) of MRI reveals tissue microstructure based on random movements of water molecules. Here we monitored, by means of DTI, median nerve integrity in CTS patients before and after corticosteroid injection. This information may help to explain the hypothesis regarding the effect of corticosteroid to the median nerve, to identify which anatomic location of median nerve relevant to the symptom relief of CTS after corticosteroid injection, and be useful for the clinical follow-up of patients with nerve entrapments following conservative treatment.

Sponsors & Collaborators

  • Tri-Service General Hospital

    lead OTHER

Principal Investigators

  • Yi-Chih Hsu, M.D · Department of Radiology, Tri-Service General Hospital, National Defense Medical Center

Eligibility

Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No

Timeline & Regulatory

Start
2016-05-26
Primary Completion
2016-12-31
Completion
2017-03-07

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Read the full study record

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View NCT03299361 on ClinicalTrials.gov