Complementary Role of Ultrasound and Clinical Features in Assessing Carpal Tunnel Syndrome Severity: A Cross-Sectional Study.
Daniela Nicoleta Popescu, Claudiu Costinel Popescu, Oana Morari, Natalia Blidaru, Alina Dima, Ioana Adriana Catanoiu, Alice Rakoczy, Ioana Otobic, Magda Ileana Parvu, Catalin Codreanu, Luminita Enache
Abstract
Open AccessBackground/Objectives: The goal of this study was to assess the correlation between ultrasound measurements and nerve conduction study (NCS)-defined carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) severity and to explore clinical and demographic factors associated with CTS severity in a sample of Romanian patients. Methods: We prospectively evaluated consecutive patients with clinically diagnosed CTS. All patients underwent standardized clinical assessment, ultrasonographic examination of the median nerve, and NCS. CTS severity was graded electrophysiologically (three-level scale), and associations with demographic, clinical, and ultrasound parameters were examined using univariate analyses and multivariable generalized estimating equation (GEE) models to account for within-patient clustering. Results: Among 193 CTS hands (100 patients, mean age 58 years, 93% female), electrophysiological severity correlated significantly with several ultrasound and clinical parameters. In multivariable GEE models, the presence of nocturnal symptoms, sensory loss, thenar weakness/atrophy, male sex, larger maximal median nerve cross-sectional area (mCSA), and impaired median nerve mobility were independent predictors of higher NCS-defined severity. Pseudo-R2 increased from 0.04 in the core clinical model to 0.25 when ultrasound parameters were included, indicating improved model performance. Conclusions: Ultrasound parameters, particularly mCSA and median nerve mobility, together with clinical features, such as nocturnal symptoms, sensory loss, and thenar weakness, are independently associated with NCS-defined CTS severity. These findings support the complementary role of ultrasound alongside NCS in severity grading and highlight its potential to guide timely diagnosis and management.