# The Influence of the Tissue Adhesive Material as a Surgical Wound-Closure Technique Following Carpal Tunnel Decompression on Neurological and Functional Outcomes: A Single-Center Randomized Controlled Trial

**Authors:** Veridijana Sunjic Roguljic, Luka Roguljic, Vedran Kovacic, Ivica Bilic, Ivana Jukic

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.53312 · 2024-01-31

## TL;DR

This study found that using tissue adhesive instead of sutures after carpal tunnel surgery improved hand strength and nerve function six months later.

## Contribution

Demonstrates that tissue adhesive wound closure improves postoperative outcomes compared to sutures in carpal tunnel decompression.

## Key findings

- Tissue adhesive use resulted in higher hand grip strength six months post-surgery.
- Median nerve sensory conduction improved significantly with tissue adhesive closure.
- More patients using tissue adhesive achieved faster sensory nerve velocities.

## Abstract

Background

Carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) is caused by compression of the median nerve in the carpal tunnel. The effect of tissue adhesives as a material for wound closure following CTS decompression has been insufficiently investigated. This study aimed to evaluate outcomes by comparing two modalities of wound closure following carpal surgery in patients randomly assigned to either tissue adhesives or sutures.

Methodology

This randomized, prospective study was conducted in April 2022 at the University Hospital of Split in Croatia. Patients aged 61.56 ± 12.03 years were randomized to either tissue adhesive Glubran Tiss 2®-based (n = 50) or suture-based (n = 50) wound-closure techniques. The following outcomes were assessed before surgery and six months postoperatively: hand strength, electroneurographic characteristics of the median nerve, and the Boston Carpal Tunnel Questionnaire.

Results

Significant differences between glue-based and suture-based wound-closure techniques were found in the six-month postoperative hand grip strength (25.06 ± 6.69 vs. 21.41 ± 5.62 kg; p = 0.002), postoperative sensory amplitude (10.08 ± 5.50 vs. 7.54 ± 5.41 mV; p = 0.012), and postoperative sensory velocity (42.22 ± 11.04 vs. 35.23 ± 16.40 m/s; p = 0.008). In the glue-based group, significantly more patients achieved a postoperative sensory velocity greater than 45 m/s (47.9% vs. 22.0%; p= 0.006), postoperative distal sensory latency less than 3.5 ms (89.6% vs. 84.0%; p = 0.304), and postoperative motor latency of less than 4.2 ms (60.42% vs. 38.00%; p = 0.022).

Conclusions

This trial demonstrated that cyanoacrylate-based adhesion material for wound closure after open CTS decompression compared with sutures showed a significant six-month postoperative increment in hand grip strength and median nerve sensory conduction.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** cyanoacrylate (PubChem CID 8711)
- **Diseases:** carpal tunnel syndrome (MONDO:0007275)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** CTS (MESH:D002349), Tunnel (MESH:D020425)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10906781/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10906781