Objective: To characterize the ultrasonographic findings on nerves in neuralgic amyotrophy.Methods: Fourteen patients with neuralgic amyotrophy were examined using high resolution ultrasound.Results: Four types of abnormalities were found: 1. Focal or diffuse nerve / fascicle enlargement (57%), 2. incomplete nerve constriction (36%), 3. complete nerve constriction with torsion (50%) (hourglass-like appearance), and 4. fascicular entwinement (28%). Torsions were confirmed intraoperatively and occurred on the radial nerve in 85% of the patients. A significant correlation was found between no spontaneous recovery of nerve function and constriction / torsion / fascicular entwinement (p=0.007).
Conclusion:Ultrasonographic nerve pathology in neuralgic amyotrophy varies in order of severity from nerve enlargement to constriction to nerve torsion, with treatment moving from conservative to surgical. We postulate that the constriction caused by inflammation is the precursor of torsion and that the development of nerve torsion is facilitated by rotational movements of limbs.
Ultrasonography may be used as a diagnostic aid in neuralgic amyotrophy, which was hitherto a clinical and electrophysiological diagnosis, and may also help in identifying potential surgical candidates. Muscle Nerve 56: 1054-1062, 2017.
Purpose: The aim of this study was to assess different aspects of reliability in high resolution ultrasonography (HRUS) of the peripheral nerves and to establish reference values for the most frequently examined nerve segments.
Materials and Methods:A nerve size parameter, the cross-sectional area (CSA) of the C5, C6 and C7 cervical roots, the median, ulnar, radial, superficial radial, peroneal, tibial, and the sural nerves was measured using HRUS at altogether 14 predefined anatomical sites in two different cohorts of healthy subjects (n=56), and the inter-rater, intra-rater and interequipment reliability of measurements was assessed.Results: Mean CSA of the 14 nerve segments ranged from 2 to 10 mm 2 . Intra-rater, inter-rater and inter-equipment reliability was high with intraclass correlation coefficients of 0.93, 0.98, and 0.86, respectively. CSA values showed no consistent correlation with age, height, and body weight, but males had significantly larger values than females for nerve segments on the arm after correcting for age, weight and height in multivariate analysis. CSA values did not differ when two independent cohorts were compared.
Conclusion:Peripheral nerve ultrasonography is a reliable and reproducible diagnostic method in the hands of experienced examiners. Normal values for several upper and lower extremity nerves are provided by our study.
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