Protective effect of glove on median nerve compression in the carpal tunnel.

Deltombe, Thierry;Theys, Serge;Jamart, Jacques;Valet, F.;Hanson, Philippe;et.al.
(2001) Spinal Cord — Vol. 39, n° 4, p. 215-222 (2001)

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Authors
  • Author
  • Theys, SergeUCLouvain
    Author
  • Jamart, JacquesUCLouvain
    Author
  • Valet, F.UCLouvain
    Author
  • Kolanowski, E.UCLouvain
    Author
  • Hanson, PhilippeUCLouvain
    Author
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Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To determine the protective effect of gel padded glove on median nerve compression in the carpal tunnel. METHODS: Median nerve conduction parameters, skin temperature, laser Doppler flowmetry and pain modifications were measured during and after a 30-min carpal tunnel external compression protocol performed with and without glove in a random order on six healthy volunteers. RESULTS: Compression induced a rapidly reversible increase in sensory and motor distal latencies, a decrease in sensory amplitude, finger laser Doppler flowmetry and hand skin temperature supporting the hypothesis of a reversible conduction block of ischemic origin. There was no statistical difference between the tests (with or without glove) except for pain that was significantly reduced by glove protection. CONCLUSION: Gel padded glove does not seem to have a protective effect on the carpal tunnel syndrome induced by compression but provides significant comfort.
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Citations

Deltombe, T., Theys, S., Jamart, J., Valet, F., Kolanowski, E., & Hanson, P. (2001). Protective effect of glove on median nerve compression in the carpal tunnel. Spinal Cord, 39(4), 215-222. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.sc.3101129 (Original work published 2001)