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Single vs. two steroid injections for carpal tunnel syndrome: a randomised clinical trial

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posted on 2005-11-01, 00:00 authored by S Wong, A Hui, Sing Lo, J Chui, W Poon, L Wong
We investigated the efficacy of a single vs. double steroid injections in the treatment of carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) in a randomised double-blind controlled trial. Patients with idiopathic CTS were randomised into (i) one group receiving a baseline methylprednisolone acetate injection plus a saline injection 8 weeks later and (ii) a second group receiving methylprednisolone acetate injection at baseline and at 8 weeks. The primary outcome was the Global Symptom Score (GSS). Forty patients were recruited. By 40 weeks, the mean GSS improved from 25.6 to 14.1 in the single-injection group whereas from 26.7 to 12.6 in the reinjection group, but there was no significant difference in GSS between the two groups (p = 0.26). There were also no significant differences in terms of electrophysiological and functional outcomes. The results suggest that an additional steroid injection confers no added benefit to a single injection in terms of symptom relief.

History

Journal

International journal of clinical practice

Volume

59

Pagination

1417 - 1421

Location

Abingdon, England

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

1368-5031

eISSN

1742-1241

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2005, Blackwell Publishing Ltd

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