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1.
We evaluated the elbow flexion test in 216 elbows without compression of the ulnar nerve at the cubital tunnel and without other neuropathies. We used Rayan's four positions as our test. The percentage of positive tests was only 3.6% at one minute, whereas evaluating the responses at three minutes we saw positive results in 16.2%. Therefore we find that if the test is performed for one minute it may be useful to help in diagnosing ulnar nerve compression at the cubital tunnel.  相似文献   

2.
The purpose of this study was to determine the relationship between the ulnar nerve and the cubital tunnel during flexion of the elbow with use of magnetic resonance imaging and measurements of intraneural and extraneural interstitial pressure. Twenty specimens from human cadavera were studied with the elbow in positions of incremental flexion. With use of magnetic resonance imaging, cross-sectional images were made at each of three anatomical regions of the cubital tunnel: the medial epicondyle, deep to the cubital tunnel aponeurosis, and deep to the flexor carpi ulnaris muscle. The cross-sectional areas of the cubital tunnel and the ulnar nerve were calculated and compared for different positions of elbow flexion. Interstitial pressures were measured with use of ultrasonographic imaging to allow a minimally invasive method of placement of the pressure catheter, both within the cubital tunnel and four centimeters proximal to it, at 10-degree increments from 0 to 130 degrees of elbow flexion. As the elbow was moved from full extension to 135 degrees of flexion, the mean cross-sectional area of the three regions of the cubital tunnel decreased by 30, 39, and 41 per cent and the mean area of the ulnar nerve decreased by 33, 50, and 34 per cent. These changes were significant in all three regions of the cubital tunnel (p < 0.05). The greatest changes occurred in the region beneath the aponeurosis of the cubital tunnel with the elbow at 135 degrees of flexion. The mean intraneural pressure within the cubital tunnel was significantly higher than the mean extraneural pressure when the elbow was flexed 90, 100, 110, and 130 degrees (p < 0.05). With the elbow flexed 130 degrees, the mean intraneural pressure was 45 per cent higher than the mean extraneural pressure (p < 0.001). Similarly, with the elbow flexed 120 degrees or more, the mean intraneural pressure four centimeters proximal to the cubital tunnel was significantly higher than the mean extraneural pressure (p < 0.01). Relative to their lowest values, intraneural pressure increased at smaller angles of flexion than did extraneural pressure, both within the cubital tunnel and proximal to it. With the numbers available, we could not detect any significant difference in intraneural pressure measured, either at the level of the cubital tunnel or four centimeters proximal to it, after release of the aponeurotic roof of the cubital tunnel.  相似文献   

3.
For a large scaled test 52 patients with anterior transposition of the ulnar nerve and 62 patients with elbow injuries were examined by questionnaire, physical examination and electroneurography. In conformity with existing literature 24 patients out of 52 suffering from cubital tunnel syndrome had an elbow trauma previously. To our great surprise in seven patients out of 46 with elbow injuries a cubital tunnel syndrome could be found for the first time. The cubital tunnel syndrome appears to be a frequent complication of elbow injuries. Besides the well known fractures of the medial epicondyle and pericondylar fractures leading to cubital tunnel syndrome, in our study fractures of the head of the radius and processus coronoideus were found quite often. Patients having typical anamnesis and complaints should be checked by electroneurography in order to permit a quick operation and to prevent incurable damages of the nerve. The diagnosis leading to operation of the elbow should however be made with greatest care. In case the operation is unavoidable, the ulnar nerve should be thoroughly checked and anterior transposition should be carried out.  相似文献   

4.
Cubital tunnel syndrome is the second-most-common compressive neuropathy. With the increasing prevalence of entrapment neuropathies, the presentation of ulnar nerve compression with a painful upper extremity appears to be more common. Although our knowledge and understanding of this disease are increasing, the principles of management remain constant. We are obliged to reach a timely and appropriate diagnosis to minimize the extent of neurologic injury and institute an appropriate treatment regimen to preserve and restore normal neural function. Although there are many ways to reach these goals, the avoidance of complications is paramount to achieve a reliable and pain-free outcome. Preventing injury to the medial antebrachial cutaneous nerve, complete release of all sites of compression, and avoidance of creating new compressive sites are the keys to this end.  相似文献   

5.
Perioperative ulnar neuropathy is a complication that occurs even in patients who seem to be appropriately padded and positioned. The disproportionately high incidence of postoperative ulnar nerve injury compared with the median and radial nerves has largely been attributed to its vulnerability to compression or stretch at the cubital tunnel. Some clinical and laboratory evidence suggests that compromise of perfusion to the upper extremity may also play a role in this complication. To determine whether the ulnar nerve is more sensitive to ischemia of the upper extremity, we studied 10 men during general anesthesia. Somatosensory evoked potentials of the radial, median, and ulnar nerves were simultaneously recorded during general anesthesia with the brachial artery occluded proximal to the cubital fossa. All three nerves showed rapid changes in signal amplitude in response to occlusion of the brachial artery, but the amplitude of the ulnar nerve was affected earlier and to a greater degree. Compared with the median nerve, the change in ulnar nerve signal amplitude during ischemia was significantly greater after 4 min (P = 0.002). This trend persisted at 6 and 8 min (P = 0.008). At 4, 6, and 8 min of ischemia, the ulnar nerve likewise showed a greater decrease in amplitude compared with the radial nerve, with corresponding P values of 0.015, 0.008, and 0.008. We conclude that the ulnar nerve is more sensitive to ischemia of the upper extremity compared with the radial and median nerves. In addition to its increased vulnerability at the elbow, compromise of arterial flow may contribute to some cases of postoperative ulnar neuropathy. IMPLICATIONS: Postoperative ulnar neuropathy is thought to result from compression or stretch of the ulnar nerve at the elbow. However, patients may sustain this complication despite careful padding and positioning. This study suggests that the ulnar nerve may also be unusually sensitive to decreases in blood supply to the arm. Care should not only to properly position and pad the elbows, but also to ensure adequate perfusion of the upper extremities.  相似文献   

6.
OBJECTIVE: To review the results of surgical management of heterotopic ossification about the elbow in burned patients. DESIGN: Retrospective analysis with long-term patient follow-up. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Eleven patients with 16 elbows requiring surgery were admitted between January 1, 1982 and December 31, 1993. A posterior approach to the elbow with release of the encased ulnar nerve +/- anterior transposition and transolecranon osteotomy to access extensive bone formation in the olecranon fossa was employed. Eight patients (11 elbows) were available for long-term follow-up conducted at mean 50 +/- 13 months after surgery. Long-term follow-up consisted of measurement of range of elbow motion, as well as clinical assessment of ulnar nerve function. MAIN RESULTS: For the 11 elbows examined postoperatively, the mean range of motion preoperatively in flexion-extension was 11 degrees +/- 5 degrees compared to 89 degrees +/- 12 degrees postoperatively (p < 0.001). Three patients with poor long-term results had ankylosis of the joint preoperatively. Of four patients with ulnar nerve paresis preoperatively, none had ulnar nerve dysfunction at follow-up. Of 16 elbows operated on, four (25%) had postoperative complications. Two suffered soft-tissue breakdown with hardware exposure requiring abdominal flap closure, one early failure of olecranon fixation, and one late infected hardware. CONCLUSIONS: Surgery for both limited range of motion as well as ulnar nerve compression is effective in cases of heterotopic ossification about the elbows of burned patients. Early operative intervention is indicated in progressive disease, particularly ulnar nerve palsy, if soft-tissue quality is adequate. Complications with 25% of elbows suggest that use of olecranon osteotomy for joint access may warrant review.  相似文献   

7.
Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging provides useful information in the evaluation of peripheral nerves. Recent advances in MR imaging allow for detailed depiction of the soft tissue structures of the elbow joint. Three major nerves are present about the elbow. Six cadaveric elbows were imaged to depict the normal anatomy of these nerves and to determine the best plane and position of the elbow for optimal visualization of each nerve. Axial images of the elbow in full extension with the forearm in supination allow identification of all major nerves. Axial images with the elbow in full flexion allow accurate assessment of the cubital tunnel and the ulnar nerve. Axial images of the elbow in full extension with the forearm in pronation are helpful for assessment of the median and radial nerves in the forearm.  相似文献   

8.
Twenty-five fresh-frozen cadaveric hands without obvious deformity were dissected using 3.5x loupe magnification. Median and ulnar nerves were identified in the proximal forearm and dissected distally to the midpalm. Cutaneous branches of median and ulnar nerves were described relative to an incision for carpal tunnel release. The palmar cutaneous branch of the median nerve was present in all 25 specimens. In a single specimen, the palmar cutaneous branch of the median nerve was isolated as it crossed the incision, and in another two specimens, the terminal branches of the nerve were identified at the margin of the incision. In 4 hands, a classic palmar cutaneous branch of the ulnar nerve was found an average of 4.9 cm proximal to the pisiform. In 10 specimens, a nerve of Henle arose an average of 14.0 cm proximal to the pisiform and traveled with the ulnar neurovascular bundle to the wrist flexion crease. In 24 specimens, at least one-usually multiple-transverse palmar cutaneous branch was identified originating an average of 3 mm distal to the pisiform within Guyon's canal. The origin and destination of these nerves was highly variable. In 16 specimens, an incision in the axis of the ring finger would likely have encountered at least one branch of the ulnar-based cutaneous innervation to the palm. Cutaneous branches of the ulnar nerve would be expected to cross the line of dissection frequently during open carpal tunnel release. Decreased levels of discomfort in patients undergoing endoscopic and subcutaneous types of carpal tunnel release may be in part due to the preservation of the crossing cutaneous nerves with these procedures.  相似文献   

9.
Compressions of the ulnar nerve at the wrist in or beyond the canal de Guyon are comparative rare. Those originating from compression in the sulcus ulnaris at the elbow are much more common. The clinical symptoms are typical: Weakness of the small muscles of the hand, loss of sensibility and pain. The diagnosis can be made on the clinical picture. It has to be confirmed by electromyography. Surgery should be performed as early as possible to avoid permanent damage to the nerve. Any delay can cause irreversible loss of function of the ulnar nerve. As causes of the compression of the ulnar nerve tumours, inflammation of the sourrounding tissue or trauma have been described. In this paper we report about compression of the ulnar nerve in the canal de Guyon due to a thrombosed aneurysme of the ulnar artery. This condition is quite rare. It is characterized through sudden onset of pain in the hand. Immediate surgery with decompression of the nerve, as we did in our case, will result in complete recovery.  相似文献   

10.
The authors report 18 cases of transfer of several ulnar nerve fascicles onto the biceps muscle nerve, performed between 1990 and 1997. The patients were between the ages of 17 and 41 years, and presented C5-C6 paralysis in 8 cases and C5-C6-C7 paralysis in 10 cases. The operation was tempted between 4 months and 6 years (m = 17 months) after the initial accident. In the 8 cases of C5-C6 paralysis reviewed, 7 patients recovered elbow flexion and only one required an additional Steindler transfer. In the 9 cases of C5-C6-C7 paralysis reviewed, 4 patients recovered elbow flexion after nerve surgery alone, while 4 patients only obtained elbow flexion after a complementary Steindler transfer. Two of these 4 patients were operated very late (27 and 75 months). Finally, a single 40-year-old patient, operated 28 months after the accident, was considered to be a complete failure. Overall, ulnar biceps nerve transfer appears to be indicated in C5-C6 avulsion, during the months following the initial accident. Flexion against gravity is then regularly obtained in less than 6 months, without any objective or subjective sequelae of the hand.  相似文献   

11.
Men develop perioperative ulnar neuropathies more frequently than women. To determine the role of anatomical gender differences in the development of these neuropathies, we performed several studies of the anatomy of the ulnar nerve, cubital tunnel, and elbow region. These studies included detailed dissection of male and female embalmed and unembalmed cadavers, ultrasound measurements of the tissue layers at the elbow, and measurement of various dimensions of the coronoid process of the ulna in multiple skeletal sets. No gross anatomical differences were found between genders regarding the course of the ulnar nerve through the upper limb. However, there was a strikingly larger (2-19 times greater) fat content on the medial aspect of the elbow in women compared to men, and the tubercle of the coronoid process was approximately 1.5 times larger in men (P < or = .002, rank sum test). Our finding suggest that the tubercle of the coronoid process is a likely area for external compression-induced ischemia of the ulnar nerve because the nerve and its arterial supply (the posterior ulnar recurrent artery) are covered at the tubercle only by skin, subcutaneous fat, and a very thin aponeurosis of the flexor carpi ulnaris. Importantly, this tubercle is larger and the nerve and blood vessels passing by it are less protected by subcutaneous fat in men than in women. These two anatomical differences between men and women may contribute to the increased frequency of perioperative ulnar neuropathy induced by external pressure at the medial aspect of the elbow in men.  相似文献   

12.
Upper extremity deformity of ischemic contracture usually includes elbow flexion, forearm pronation, wrist flexion, thumb flexion and adduction, digital metacarpophalangeal joint extension, and interphalangeal joint flexion. Treatment of mild contractures consists of either nonoperative management with a comprehensive rehabilitation program (to increase range of motion and strenght) or operative management consisting of infarct excision or tendon lengthening. Treatment of moderate-to-severe contractures consists of release of secondary nerve compression, treatment of contractures (with tendon lengthening or recession), tendon or free-tissue transfers to restore lost function, and/or salvage procedures for the severely contracted or neglected extremity.  相似文献   

13.
Ulnar nerve entrapment at the elbow has been described in the literature. This paper deals with 19 skeletally mature baseball players with ulnar nerve entrapment who underwent surgery for correction of the problem. The surgery consisted of anterior transfer of the nerve and placement deep to the flexor muscles. Six players quit baseball because of continuing elbow problems, nine returned to playing, and four were lost to follow-up. Ulnar nerve entrapment is thought to represent one syndrome in a spectrum of diseases involving the medial side of the elbow in baseball players. The lesion is amenable to surgery.  相似文献   

14.
We developed a dynamic model of the upper extremity to simulate forearm and wrist movements. The model is based on the skeletal structure of the arm and is capable of elbow flexion/extension, forearm pronosupination, and wrist flexion/extension and radial/ulnar deviation movements. Movements are produced by activation of a Hill-type model of muscle, and limits on joint motion are imposed by passive moments modeled after experimental results. We investigated the muscle output force sensitivity, as well as wrist flexion/extension motion sensitivity to parameter variations. The tendon slack length and muscle fiber length were found to have the greatest influence on muscle output and flexion/extension wrist motion. The model captured the direction of the moment vectors at the wrist well, but predicted much higher moments than were measured by stimulating the paralyzed muscles of one tetraplegic subject.  相似文献   

15.
The relative sensitivities of sensory, mixed nerve, and motor conduction studies in assessing ulnar neuropathy at the elbow have not yet been established. Using surface electrodes, we performed conduction studies across the elbow segment in 43 patients with symptoms referable to the ulnar nerve and 40 control subjects. Segmental slowing of motor conduction localized the lesion to the elbow in 14 of 21 patients (67%) with clear evidence of ulnar neuropathy on physical examination but only in 2 of 22 (9%) with subtle or no physical examination abnormalities. The diagnostic yield was increased by the finding of segmental slowing of sensory or mixed nerve conduction across the elbow to 86% and 68%, respectively, for each of the groups. We conclude that surface-recorded sensory and mixed nerve conduction studies appear to be more sensitive than motor studies in the electrodiagnosis of ulnar neuropathy at the elbow and are especially valuable in patients with subtle clinical involvement.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Five studies of tennis elbow are presented. Epidemiological studies showed an incidence of tennis elbow between 1 and 2%. The prevalence of tennis elbow in women between 40 and 50 years of age was 10%. Half of the patients with tennis elbow seek medical attention. Local corticosteroid injections were superior to the physiotherapy regime of Cyriax. Release of the common forearm extensor origin resulted in 70% excellent or good results one year after operation and 89% at five years. Anatomical investigations and nerve conduction studies of the Radial Tunnel Syndrome supported the hypothesis that the Lateral Cubital Force Transmission System is involved in the pathogenesis of tennis elbow.  相似文献   

18.
We report a case of cubital tunnel syndrome caused by tophaceous gout. The ulnar nerve was compressed by a tophus at the distal cubital tunnel. Surgical decompression relieved the symptoms.  相似文献   

19.
A patient developed after an occupational trauma with fall on the ulnar edge of his right hand pain and swelling in the ulnar area with reduced sensation in the fourth and fifth finger. After examination performed by a neurologist, ulnar nerve-entrapment was diagnosed and operative treatment was indicated. The release of the ulnar tunnel showed a traumatic aneurysma of the ulnar artery compressing the superficial branch of the ulnar nerve. The tumor was removed and end-to-end anastomosis ensued. Four weeks after surgery, examination showed complete recovery. Various reasons of ulnar tunnel syndrome are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Four cases of post-operative ulnar nerve mononeuropathy are reported. In all the cases a severe sensory and motor loss was strictly limited to ulnar nerve territory. The electrophysiological examination: needle examination, motor and sensory nerve conduction studies and even more somatosensory potential evoked from ulnar nerve after stimulation above elbow allowed to eliminate a lesion at the elbow and to asses the lesion at wrist, arm, axilla or plexus. Full recovery occurred once and partial recovery twice. We considered that these ulnar lesions are neuralgic amyotrophies of Parsonage and Turner according to the epidemiological, clinical, evolutive and electrophysiological data.  相似文献   

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