Diagnosis and Treatment of Worker-Related Musculoskeletal Disorders of the Upper Extremity: Summary (continued)


Cubital Tunnel Syndrome

Question 1: What are the most effective methods and approaches for the early identification and diagnosis of cubital tunnel syndrome?

Question 2: What are the specific indications for surgery for cubital tunnel syndrome?

Question 3: What are the relative benefits and harms of various surgical and nonsurgical interventions for persons with cubital tunnel syndrome?

Question 4: Is there a relationship between specific clinical findings and specific treatment outcomes among patients with cubital tunnel syndrome?

Question 5: Is there a relationship between duration of symptoms and specific treatment outcomes among patients with cubital tunnel syndrome?

Question 6: Is there a relationship between factors such as patients' age, gender, socioeconomic status and/or racial or ethnic grouping and specific treatment outcomes among patients with cubital tunnel syndrome?

Question 7: What are the surgical and nonsurgical costs or charges for treatment of cubital tunnel syndrome?

Question 8: For persons who have had surgery for cubital tunnel syndrome, what are the most effective methods for preventing the recurrence of symptoms, and how does this vary depending on subject characteristics or other underlying health problems?

Question 9: What instruments, if any, can accurately assess functional limitations in an individual with cubital tunnel syndrome?

Question 10: What are the functional limitations for an individual with cubital tunnel syndrome before treatment?

Question 11: What are the functional limitations of an individual with cubital tunnel syndrome after treatment?

Epicondylitis

Question 1: What are the most effective methods and approaches for the early identification and diagnosis of epicondylitis?

Question 2: What are the specific indications for surgery for epicondylitis?

Question 3: What are the relative benefits and harms of various surgical and nonsurgical interventions for persons with epicondylitis?

Question 4: Is there a relationship between specific clinical findings and specific treatment outcomes among patients with epicondylitis?

Question 5: Is there a relationship between duration of symptoms and specific treatment outcomes among patients with epicondylitis?

Question 6: Is there a relationship between factors such as patients' age, gender, socioeconomic status and/or racial or ethnic grouping and specific treatment outcomes among patients with epicondylitis?

Question 7: What are the surgical and nonsurgical costs or charges for treatment of epicondylitis?

Question 8: For persons who have had surgery for epicondylitis, what are the most effective methods for preventing the recurrence of symptoms, and how does this vary depending on subject characteristics or other underlying health problems?

Question 9: What instruments, if any, can accurately assess functional limitations in an individual with epicondylitis?

Question 10: What are the functional limitations for an individual with epicondylitis before treatment?

Question 11: What are the functional limitations of an individual with epicondylitis after treatment?

De Quervain's Disease

Question 1: What are the most effective methods and approaches for the early identification and diagnosis of de Quervain's disease?

Question 2: What are the specific indications for surgery for de Quervain's disease?

Question 3: What are the relative benefits and harms of various surgical and nonsurgical interventions for persons with de Quervain's disease?

Question 4: Is there a relationship between specific clinical findings and specific treatment outcomes among patients with de Quervain's disease?

Question 5: Is there a relationship between duration of symptoms and specific treatment outcomes among patients with de Quervain's disease?

Question 6: Is there a relationship between factors such as patients' age, gender, socioeconomic status and/or racial or ethnic grouping and specific treatment outcomes among patients with de Quervain's disease?

Question 7: What are the surgical and nonsurgical costs or charges for treatment of de Quervain's disease?

Question 8: For persons who have had surgery for de Quervain's disease, what are the most effective methods for preventing the recurrence of symptoms, and how does this vary depending on subject characteristics or other underlying health problems?

Question 9: What instruments, if any, can accurately assess functional limitations in an individual with de Quervain's disease?

Question 10: What are the functional limitations for an individual with de Quervain's disease before treatment?

Question 11: What are the functional limitations of an individual with de Quervain's disease after treatment?

Non-Treatment-Specific Questions

Question 12: What are the cumulative effects on functional abilities among individuals with more than one worker-related musculoskeletal disorder of the upper extremity in the same limb?

Question 13: What level of function can patients achieve in what period of time when they are required to change hand dominance as a result of injury to their dominant hand?

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Future Research

In general, the literature addressing WRUEDs is of uneven quality. Well-designed studies on many aspects of WRUEDs are needed. Prospective, randomized double-blinded controlled trials are widely considered to provide the highest quality of evidence for treatment effectiveness. Results of non-randomized trials can be affected by differences in the characteristics of the patient groups, rather than the treatment applied. Uncontrolled trials do not allow one to ascertain whether patients improve in the absence of treatment, and they do not allow one to accurately gauge the magnitude of any change that occurs after treatment. Blinding of patients and evaluators to treatments avoids the potential for placebo effects and previously held beliefs about the effectiveness of treatments to impact on the results of trials.

Studies of diagnostic tests do not necessarily need not be randomized or contain control groups. In the absence of a “gold standard” test, longitudinal studies are the most desirable for assessing diagnostic tests for WRUEDs. In these studies, patients are first given the diagnostic test, and then they are followed for a period of time to determine whether they develop symptoms of a WRUED. Repeating the tests at regular intervals during the trial could yield insights into the etiology of the conditions as well as measure test-retest variability.

If a “gold standard” test were developed, then single-arm cross-sectional studies that compared the results of the “gold standard” test to the results of the test under investigation would be appropriate. In such studies, in order to obtain the most useful information, it is important to select a patient population that closely resembles the general population on whom the diagnostic test would ultimately be used.

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Availability of Full Report

The full evidence report from which this summary was derived was prepared for AHRQ by ECRI's Health Technology Assessment Group under contract number 290-97-0020. Printed copies may be obtained free of charge from the AHRQ Publications Clearinghouse by calling 800-358-9295. Requestors should ask for Evidence Report/Technology Assessment No. 62, Diagnosis and Treatment of Worker-Related Musculoskeletal Disorders of the Upper Extremity.

The Evidence Report can also be downloaded as a set of PDF Files or as a zipped file.

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AHRQ Publication Number 02-E027
Current as of October 2002


Internet Citation:

Diagnosis and Treatment of Worker-Related Musculoskeletal Disorders of the Upper Extremity. Summary, Evidence Report/Technology Assessment: Number 62. AHRQ Publication Number 02-E027, October 2002. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. http://www.ahrq.gov/clinic/epcsums/musclsum.htm


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