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. 1993 May;18(3):455-8.
doi: 10.1016/0363-5023(93)90091-G.

Acute exacerbation of carpal tunnel syndrome after radial artery cannulation

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Acute exacerbation of carpal tunnel syndrome after radial artery cannulation

S D Martin et al. J Hand Surg Am. 1993 May.

Abstract

Acute carpal tunnel syndrome that follows radial artery cannulation has been described. To determine the incidence and predisposing factors, we prospectively studied 151 patients who had perioperative radial artery cannulation. Postoperatively 9 of the 151 patients had symptoms of carpal tunnel syndrome with positive Phalen and Tinel signs on the side on which the radial artery catheter had been inserted. Eight of 12 patients with a prior history of carpal tunnel syndrome had acute exacerbation of symptoms postoperatively. By contrast, only 1 of 139 patients with no prior history of the disorder had symptoms. Fourteen patients had multiple arterial artery punctures or perforations of the posterior wall of the radial artery. In three of these, postoperative symptoms of carpal tunnel syndrome developed but did not reach statistical significance. The only patient with postoperative acute carpal tunnel syndrome but no prior history of the syndrome had multiple arterial punctures. The use of perioperative anticoagulation, the use of wrist-extension splints, and the duration of radial artery cannulation did not influence acute exacerbation of carpal tunnel syndrome. Patients with a prior history of carpal tunnel syndrome are at increased risk of recurrent symptoms after radial artery cannulation. We found no statistically significant relationship between traumatic cannulations and the development of symptoms of carpal tunnel syndrome.

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