The reader is referred to the updated review 2 for a detailed discussion of the literature and the EDX techniques for the assessment of CTS which are summarized here. Both reviews addressed the following key clinical questions:
To determine the incidence of symptomatic thromboembolism in patients with chronic spinal cord injury, a retrospective review of patients followed in a Veteran's Affairs Spinal Cord Injury Unit was conducted. Followed for a mean of 13.7 years after injury, 287 patients were reviewed. Forty events were identified, an incidence of 10 percent. Thirty-three (83 percent) occurred in the first 6 months following injury. The remainder occurred at 1, 1.5, 7, 9, 10, 12, and 14 years after injury, an incidence of 0.17 percent per year. The incidence of clinically significant thromboembolism in spinal cord injury decreases dramatically after the first 6 months to a level similar to that in the general population (0.18 percent). Possible explanations for this include: 1) immobilization by itself may not be a risk factor for thromboembolism; 2) physiologic adaptations in the chronic state may protect against thromboembolism; and, 3) thromboembolism occurs, but remains subclinical in most patients.
We report 3 cases of isolated deep peroneal nerve injury as a complication of arthroscopic knee surgery. At the level of the knee joint, the deep and superficial peroneal nerves are usually joined as the common peroneal nerve. However, because of the fascicular structure, a partial nerve injury can result in an isolated injury to the deep peroneal nerve fibers. Due to the intraneural topography of the peroneal nerve, electrodiagnostic studies in a partial nerve injury may erroneously indicate a more distal lesion.
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