Symptoms, disability, and quality of life in patients with carpal tunnel syndrome

Isam Atroshi, Christina Gummesson, Ragnar Johnsson, A Sprinchorn

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

We used validated outcome instruments to measure symptoms, disability, and health-related quality of life in 58 patients with carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS). The patients completed the CTS instrument before and 6 weeks, 3 months, and 6 months after surgery and the Short Form-36 (SF-36) before and 3 months after surgery. The size of clinical change detected by each outcome measure was estimated by the standardized response mean (mean change/ standard deviation of the change). Large improvement was observed for the CTS symptom scale (mean standardized response, 1.4-1.9) and function scale (0.8-1.1). Improvement in SF-36 scales was large for pain (1.0) and moderate for physical role, mental health, and the physical component summary (0.5-0.6). Compared with the general population SF-36 norms (n = 2,181), CTS patients had significantly worse scores for physical functioning, physical role, pain, vitality, and the physical component summary before surgery. After surgery, SF-36 scores had normalized except for physical role and the physical component summary.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)398-404
JournalThe Journal of Hand Surgery
Volume24
Issue number2
Publication statusPublished - 1999

Bibliographical note

The information about affiliations in this record was updated in December 2015.
The record was previously connected to the following departments: Division of Physiotherapy (Closed 2012) (013042000), Department of Orthopaedics (Lund) (013028000)

Subject classification (UKÄ)

  • Surgery

Free keywords

  • Measurement scale
  • Evaluation
  • Carpal tunnel syndrome
  • Quality of life
  • Symptomatology
  • Prognosis
  • Preoperative
  • Postoperative
  • Disability
  • Methodology
  • Human
  • Compression
  • Nervous system diseases
  • Peripheral nerve disease
  • Diseases of the osteoarticular system

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