Most patients with carpal tunnel syndrome
will put up with their symptoms for days and weeks until they're
troubling enough to bring to a doctor's attention. Their doctor should
rule out certain causes for the hand pain (such as diabetes) and focus
the examination on the wrist and other anatomic sites where nerve
compression may [..]
Patients with carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) have hand and wrist symptoms that range from tingling and numbness to pain and weakness. Some occupations see more of this disease than others. For example, workers who use vibratory hand tools and those who engage in repetitive flexion motions of the wrist seem to be at greatest risk. [..]
Carpal tunnel
symptoms typically come on slowly. Day after day we are able to type at
the computer with no problem and then one morning a little tingling in
the fingers develops. We shake our hands, stretch the fingers, and try
to go back to the keyboard. But inevitably the tingling continues and
seems to [..]
Carpal tunnel syndrome
occurs when the nerve (median), which runs from the forearm into the
hand, becomes compressed between the displaced bones of the wrist. Nerve
signals originate in the brain and follow tracts down the spinal cord
through openings between the neck bones (vertebrae). The nerves then
travel down the arm and into the [..]