Electrodiagnosis of carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) were prospectively studied in 95 hands. The following techniques were studied in all hands and when at least one abnormal value was found (onset-measured), it was included on results: 1. wrist-index finger latency (WIF), abnormal > or = 2.8 ms, 140 mm; 2. palm-wrist latency (PW), abnormal > or = 1.8 ms, 80 mm; 3. comparison median/ulnar palm-wrist latency (CPW), abnormal > or = 0.4 ms; 4. comparison median/ulnar latency, wrist-ring finger (CMU), abnormal > or = 0.5 ms, 140 mm; 5. comparison median/radial latency, wrist-thumb (CMR), abnormal > or = 0.4 ms, 100 mm. All 95 CTS hands selected have the WIF <= 3.5 ms (mild CTS). We found the CMR (97.8%) technique the most sensitive for mild CTS electrodiagnosis and the only comparative method with all potentials recordable when compared to CPW (88.4%), PW (84.2%), CMU (72.6%) and WIF (68.4%).
carpal tunnel syndrome; compression neuropathy; median nerve; electrodiagnosis; nerve conduction studies