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This is a clinician-written, evidence-based summary aligned to the USMLE Step 2 CK Content Outline. It is intended for medical students preparing for USMLE Step 2 CK. Management reflects current ACC/AHA, USPSTF, and APA guidelines. Always cross-reference with UpToDate, institutional protocols, and clinical judgment.
The Bottom Line
- Median nerve compression in the carpal tunnel
- Nocturnal paresthesias in thumb, index, middle, and radial ring finger
- Thenar weakness/atrophy indicates severe disease
- Initial treatment: neutral wrist splinting and activity modification
- Severe or refractory disease requires carpal tunnel release
Overview
Carpal tunnel syndrome is median nerve entrapment beneath the transverse carpal ligament. It causes nocturnal median-distribution sensory symptoms and advanced thenar motor dysfunction.
Epidemiology
Most common entrapment neuropathy. Risk factors include repetitive hand use, obesity, diabetes, pregnancy, hypothyroidism, RA, acromegaly, CKD/dialysis, and wrist fracture.
Clinical Features
Symptoms
Numbness/tingling in thumb, index, middle, radial ring finger
Nocturnal symptoms relieved by shaking hand
Symptoms with driving, phone use, typing, wrist flexion
Dropping objects or reduced pinch strength
Neck pain/radiating arm pain suggests radiculopathy
Signs
Reduced median-distribution sensation with thenar eminence often spared
Positive Phalen or carpal compression test
Positive Tinel sign at wrist
Thenar weakness or atrophy
Normal ulnar sensation unless another neuropathy coexists
Investigations
First-line
Focused clinical assessmentPattern recognition, red flags, functional impact, and targeted examination
Basic labs when indicatedCBC, CMP, ESR/CRP, CK, urinalysis, or disease-specific testing depending on suspected condition
Initial imaging when indicatedPlain radiographs or MRI/ultrasound based on suspected structural, inflammatory, infectious, or neurologic disease
Second-line
Disease-specific confirmatory testingAutoantibodies, HLA-B27, synovial fluid, nerve conduction studies, DEXA, or cultures as appropriate
MRI/ultrasound/CTUsed for early inflammatory disease, occult fracture, tendon tear, infection, or surgical planning
Screening before immunosuppressionTB, hepatitis, vaccination review, and baseline labs when biologic or high-risk therapy is planned
Specialist
Specialist referralRheumatology, orthopedics, infectious disease, ophthalmology, neurology, or spine surgery depending on red flags and disease severity
1
Initial management
- Address red flags and emergencies first
- Use guideline-directed first-line therapy matched to disease severity
- Educate the patient and set functional goals
- Use analgesia and rehabilitation when appropriate
2
Escalation
- Escalate to specialist-directed therapy if severe, refractory, progressive, or organ-threatening disease
- Use imaging, procedures, immunosuppression, antibiotics, or surgery according to diagnosis
- Monitor response objectively and revise diagnosis if response is atypical
3
Prevention and follow-up
- Manage comorbidities and medication toxicity
- Vaccinate and screen when immunosuppression is used
- Prevent disability, falls, fracture, infection, and functional decline
Complications
- Functional impairment: Pain, weakness, stiffness, deformity, or disability depending on disease
- Diagnostic delay: Missed infection, fracture, inflammatory disease, neurologic compromise, or organ-threatening complication
- Medication toxicity: NSAID, steroid, antibiotic, anticoagulation, opioid, or immunosuppressive adverse effects
- Chronic disease burden: Reduced quality of life, work impairment, deconditioning, and mental health impact
USMLE Step 2 CK Exam Tips
- 1Nocturnal median paresthesias relieved by shaking = CTS
- 2Thenar eminence sensation is spared
- 3Thenar atrophy = severe disease and surgical referral
- 4Phalen = wrist flexion reproduces symptoms
- 5NCS confirms severe/atypical/preoperative disease
- 6Initial treatment = neutral night splint
practicetest your knowledge on carpal tunnel syndromeApply what you've learnt with USMLE Step 2 CK-style questions from the iatroX Q-Bank — musculoskeletal and beyond.
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