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"Failure is not an option" |
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What the Patient
Feels
Carpal tunnel syndrome is the most common
cause of numbness, tingling and pain in the hand. Typically, they
occur in the thumb, index and long fingers. They occur off and on
in the beginning but as time passes, they become constant. The
symptoms are aggravated at night as the wrist tends to assume
bent position in sleep. Keeping the wrist in a straight position
with a splint or a brace relieves the symptoms. Very often, but
not always, the pain radiates to the elbow, shoulder or the neck.
The pain may be sharp, dull, burning, hot or cold. Often the
patient says that the hand and fingers feel swollen, tight, like
sand paper or like feeling the finger through gloves.
As the patient starts to lose sensation, things start falling out of the hand.
THE HAND IS NOW IN TROUBLE!
What the Doctor Does
The diagnosis is established in most cases
with a simple examination of the hand. Making a tight fist for
one minute reproduces numbness, tingling or pain. Bending the
wrist fully for one minute also reproduces the above symptoms.
Finally manual pressure on the nerve at the wrist crease
reproduces the symptoms.
Numbness and tingling can be caused by pressure on the nerve along the nerve from the neck to the finger tips. The pressure is usually caused by a tight band of tissue called a ligament. The location of nerve pinching can be confirmed with an office test called nerve conduction test. It measures the speed at which the electricity flows in the nerve. It takes about ten minutes to do. No needles are used when the test is done with the modern machines.
Treatment
The first line of treatment is splinting
and two to three cortisone injections. The cortisone amount is so
minute that it does not cause any side effects. One need not
worry about gaining weight with injections. We try this for a
month. If the symptoms are distressing, surgery is the last
resort.