Clinical Neurophysiology Practice (Jan 2020)

Impact of technical variations on the ring-finger test for carpal tunnel syndrome

  • Daniel Gregor Schulze,
  • Karl-Christian Nordby,
  • Milada Cvancarova Småstuen,
  • Thomas Clemm,
  • Margreth Grotle,
  • John Anker Zwart,
  • Kristian Bernhard Nilsen

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5
pp. 23 – 29

Abstract

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Objective: To assess if recording the sensory latencies of the median and ulnar nerves one-by-one (consecutive) or at the same time (simultaneous) in the ring-finger test for carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) will show equivalent results or if it will lead to a different clinical classification of patients. Methods: We assessed the limits of agreement between the simultaneous and the consecutive method based on the median- ulnar sensory latency difference derived by both methods in 80 subjects and compared the number of minimal CTS cases identified by the two methods. Results: Limits of agreement ranged from −0.23 to 0.29 ms. A significantly higher proportion of subjects with minimal CTS (only detectable by using the comparison test) was found using the simultaneous method (n = 8 and 2, respectively; p = 0.03). Conclusion: The two methods have a poor to moderate agreement as indicated by the range of the limits of agreement (0.5 ms). Significance: Even small methodological changes to the ring-finger test can lead to results with different clinical meaning in the same individual and one should be aware of which method was used when interpreting results.

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