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Wheeless' Textbook of Orthopaedics
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Treatment of de Quervain tenosynovitis. A prospective study of the


results of injection of steroids and immobilization in a splint. Witt-J; Pess-G; Gelberman-RH Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, 02114. J-Bone-Joint-Surg-Am. 1991 Feb; 73(2): 219-22 In a prospective study of non-operative treatment of de Quervain tenosynovitis, ninety-nine wrists of ninety-five consecutively seen patients who had this diagnosis had an injection of one milliliter of a 1 per cent lidocaine solution and one milliliter of a suspension containing forty milligrams of methylprednisolone acetate. Twelve patients (twelve wrists) were lost to follow-up. Of the remaining eighty-seven wrists, fifty-four (62 per cent) had a satisfactory outcome at a mean of eighteen months (minimum follow-up, twelve months). The duration of symptoms before treatment did not affect the outcome. The result in thirty-three wrists (38 per cent) was considered unsatisfactory. Thirty of these wrists were subsequently treated with operative release of the first dorsal compartment, and twenty-two (73 per cent) of the thirty were found to have a separate compartment for the extensor pollicis brevis. The prevalence of a separate compartment is significantly higher than that in the general population, as shown in anatomical studies of cadavera.



Original Text by Clifford R. Wheeless, III, MD.