The natural history of untreated dorsal wrist ganglia and patient reported outcome 6 years after intervention
- PMID: 17950209
- DOI: 10.1016/J.JHSE.2007.05.007
The natural history of untreated dorsal wrist ganglia and patient reported outcome 6 years after intervention
Abstract
We have evaluated the long-term outcome of excision, aspiration and no treatment of dorsal wrist ganglia prospectively in 236 (83%) of 283 patients who responded to a postal questionnaire at a mean of 70 months. The resolution of symptoms was similar between the treatment groups (p>0.3). Pain and unsightliness improved in all three treatment groups. The prevalence of weakness and stiffness altered only slightly in all three treatment groups. More patients with a recurrent, or persistent ganglion complained of pain, stiffness and unsightliness (p<0.0001). Patient satisfaction was higher after surgical excision (p<0.0001), even if the ganglion recurred. Twenty-three of 55 (58%) untreated ganglia resolved spontaneously. The recurrence rate was 58% (45/78) and 39% (40/103) following aspiration and excision, respectively. Eight out of 103 patients had complications following surgery. In this study, neither excision nor aspiration provided significant long-term benefit over no treatment.
Comment in
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Re: The natural history of untreated dorsal wrist ganglia and patient reported outcome 6 years after intervention, J.J. Dias, V. Dhukaram and P. Kumar, Journal of Hand Surgery (2007) 32E(5): 502-508.J Hand Surg Eur Vol. 2008 Jun;33(3):398-9; author reply 399. doi: 10.1177/1753193408090093. J Hand Surg Eur Vol. 2008. PMID: 18562391 No abstract available.
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Re: The natural history of untreated dorsal wrist ganglia and patient reported outcome 6 years after intervention. Journal of Hand Surgery 2007; 32E: 502-508.J Hand Surg Eur Vol. 2008 Jun;33(3):398; author reply 398. doi: 10.1177/1753193408090756. J Hand Surg Eur Vol. 2008. PMID: 18562392 No abstract available.
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