J Korean Acad Rehabil Med.  2000 Oct;24(5):939-945.

Changes of Nerve Conduction at High Temperature in Patients with Carpal Tunnel Syndrome

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Asan Medical Center, University of Ulsan College of Medicine.

Abstract


OBJECTIVE
High body temperature may alter nerve conduction in demyelinated neurons. This study was designed to investigate the changes in nerve conduction parameters in response to the heat applied over the wrist in the patients with carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS). METHOD: 16 hands of CTS patients and 16 hands of normal subjects were involved in this study. Motor and sensory nerve responses were measured at 32degrees C and 42degrees C in all the subjects. Infrared was applied on the wrist to warm the skin to 42degrees C. Changes of relative amplitude, duration, and latency of evoked potentials in median sensory and motor nerves of CTS patients were compared with those of the normal subjects. Correlation between the latency measured at 32degrees C and changes of amplitude of motor and sensory nerve responses after warming to 42degrees C was evaluated in CTS group.
RESULTS
Relative reduction in duration of motor responses in CTS group was significantly greater than in normal group. Relative reduction of motor and sensory amplitude, and sensory latency were greater in CTS. There was no significant relation between motor and sensory latency at 32degrees C and relative amplitude reduction in motor and sensory responses at 42degrees C.
CONCLUSION
Increase in temperature may increase the number of blocked nerve fibers in patients with CTS than in normal subjects.

Keyword

Carpal tunnel syndrome; Nerve conduction; Temperature

MeSH Terms

Body Temperature
Carpal Tunnel Syndrome*
Evoked Potentials
Hand
Hot Temperature
Humans
Nerve Fibers
Neural Conduction*
Neurons
Skin
Wrist
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