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Not Yet RecruitingNCT07048379

Different Treatment Approaches for Carpal Tunnel Syndrome

Comparison of Orthotics, Physical Therapy, and Physical Therapy+Orthotics in Patients With Carpal Tunnel Syndrome

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
51 (estimated)
Sponsor
Sakarya University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Carpal tunnel syndrome is a common syndrome in the upper extremities resulting from compression of the median nerve, which branches out to the first three fingers of the wrist. The project will be studied in three separate groups. The first group consists of patients who only use orthoses, the second group consists of patients who only receive physical therapy, and the third group consists of patients who receive both orthoses and physical therapy. The aim of all three groups is to examine the effects of the interventions on the daily living activities, pain, grip strength, and quality of life of patients with carpal tunnel syndrome and to evaluate the patients' satisfaction levels after the interventions. As part of the study, the group using orthoses will be given a resting orthosis that keeps the wrist in a neutral position. The group receiving physical therapy will be administered Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation (TENS) current, hot packs, and exercises. The third group will receive both the orthosis approach and the physical therapy approach. Ultimately, this project aims to help determine the most beneficial intervention for patients with carpal tunnel syndrome by comparing these three interventions.

Detailed description

Carpal tunnel syndrome is a peripheral neuropathy caused by compression of the median nerve in the wrist. It is a syndrome that is commonly seen in approximately 1-5% of the population throughout their lifetime. It is more common in middle-aged women. Conservative treatment is generally preferred for mild to moderate carpal tunnel syndrome. Conservative treatment allows for the reduction or even elimination of symptoms associated with this syndrome without the need for surgery. Individuals can continue their daily lives as usual. The use of orthoses, one of these methods, plays an important role in the treatment of carpal tunnel syndrome. Orthotics minimise movement of the wrist, preventing compression in this area, contributing to functional improvement and benefiting the individual's daily activities. Using orthotics throughout the day can have a positive effect on the individual's condition by reducing and preventing inflammation of the median nerve. Another conservative treatment approach is physical therapy. In physical therapy, exercises to strengthen the wrist muscles, stretching exercises to increase joint range of motion, and hot-cold applications in people with carpal tunnel syndrome are also effective in reducing pain. Additionally, there are patients who use orthoses and undergo physical therapy. When comparing the treatment periods of this group of patients to the other two groups, it is believed that their recovery periods will be shorter and they will recover more quickly than with the other two approaches. This study's aim is investigating the effects of the three intervention approaches on patients' quality of life, daily living activities, reduction in pain intensity, and grip strength, taking patient satisfaction into account. The project will be examined across three separate groups. The first group consists of patients who use only orthoses, the second group consists of patients who receive only physical therapy, and the third group consists of patients who receive both orthoses and physical therapy. The aim of all three groups is to examine the effects of the interventions on the daily living activities, pain, grip strength, and quality of life of patients with carpal tunnel syndrome and to evaluate the patients' satisfaction levels after the interventions. As part of the study, the group using orthoses will be given a resting orthosis that keeps the wrist in a neutral position. The group receiving physical therapy will be administered Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation (TENS) current, hot packs, and exercises. The third group will receive both the orthosis approach and the physical therapy approach. Ultimately, this project aims to help determine the most beneficial intervention for patients with carpal tunnel syndrome by comparing these three interventions.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEOrthosisA resting orthosis will be preferred because it keeps the wrist in a neutral position.
OTHERPhysical TherapyParticipants will undergo physical therapy for three weeks, including hot packs, TENS, tendon-nerve sliding exercises, stretching and strengthening exercises.

Timeline

Start date
2025-07-25
Primary completion
2025-07-25
Completion
2025-09-25
First posted
2025-07-02
Last updated
2025-07-22

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07048379. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.