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cubital tunnel syndrome icd 10
Garland FC; Garland CF; Doyle EJ; Balazs LL; Levine R; Pugh WM; Gorham ED
The objectives of this abstraction were to (a) call demographic factors associated with aerial ante of carpal adit affection (CTS), cubital adit syndrome, and added neuritis of the arm and hand, and (2) analyze the high-risk occupations associated with these disorders in the Navy. Computerized annal of aboriginal hospitalizations of all active-duty Navy-enlisted cadre were searched for all cases of CTS, cubital adit syndrome, and added neuritis of the arm and duke (ICD-9 CM codes 354.0-354.9) during 1980-1988. There were 1039 aboriginal hospitalizations (including 493 cases of CTS) for all neuritis of the arm and duke in 4095708 person-years in men and 186 aboriginal hospitalizations (including 90 cases of CTS) in 365668 person-years in women. Accident ante of ailing cases with CTS rose with age for both sexes. Ante in white women were about three times those in white men (p < .0001), but ante in atramentous women were not decidedly altered from those in atramentous men. Ante of cubital adit affection additionally added with age in both sexes and were college in white women than white men (p < .05). Occupations with decidedly aerial connected accident ratios (p < .05) for CTS in men included aviation-support accessories technician, engineman, hull-maintenance technician, boatswain's mate, and machinist's mate. In women, occupations with decidedly aerial connected accident ratios included boatswain's mate, engineman, hospital corpsman, ocean-systems technician, and personnelman. Several occupations for anniversary sex had decidedly aerial connected accident ratios for cubital adit syndrome, with aerial ante in hospital corpsmen of both sexes (p < .05). Gender and chase differences according to activity did not annual for the occupations at accomplished risk. Further analysis is bare to actuate the admeasurement to which CTS and accompanying disorders could be prevented by modifying the motions currently performed in occupations with the accomplished connected accident ratios.
From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.
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