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1.
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   

2.
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   

3.
We treated two children with the unusual complication of ulnar nerve palsy after closed both-bone forearm fractures. Both patients developed an ulnar claw-hand deformity within 7 weeks of injury that resolved spontaneously by 20 weeks postinjury with nonoperative treatment. No patient showed any signs or symptoms of an ischemic compartment syndrome. Both nerve injuries were identified immediately at the time of fracture by a careful neurologic examination. This avoids confusion with a postreduction nerve entrapment injury or ischemic injury after a localized compartment syndrome, which may have considerably different treatments and outcomes. We recommend that a careful neurologic examination be recorded before any manipulative reduction of forearm fractures in children. If an ulnar nerve palsy is detected, it is probably a result of nerve contusion and should resolve without the need for surgical exploration.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
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   

6.
Cubital tunnel syndrome is the second most common peripheral compression neuropathy. The unique anatomic relationships of the ulnar nerve at the elbow place it at risk for injury. Normally with elbow range of motion, the ulnar nerve is subjected to compression, traction, and frictional forces. As the elbow is flexed the arcuate ligament elongates producing a decrease in canal volume of 55%. Intraneural and extraneural pressures increase and have been shown to exceed 200 mm Hg with elbow flexion and flexor carpi ulnaris contraction. Because the ulnar nerve courses behind the elbow axis of rotation, elbow flexion produces excursion of the nerve proximal and distal to the medial epicondyle. The ulnar nerve also elongates 4.7 to 8 mm with elbow flexion. Cubital tunnel syndrome may develop because of various factors including repetitive elbow motion, prolonged elbow flexion, or direct compression. An understanding of the anatomy and pathophysiology associated with cubital tunnel syndrome will aid in patient evaluation and determination of the appropriate treatment.  相似文献   

7.
Clinical examination of 100 children showed frequent loss of wrist extension and ulnar deviation. Loss of flexion and radial deviation in the metacarpophalangeal joint is more frequent than in the adult. Statistical review of charts and roentgenograms of 200 patients showed all had ulnar shortening up to 9 mm but there was no correlation with ulnar deviation or netacarpophalangeal radial deviation. Conservative treatment is reviewed; surgery is rarely indicated.  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.
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   

10.
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   

11.
Although primary carpal tunnel release is usually successful, reoperation is needed in up to 3% of patients. Common indications of reoperation are previous incomplete surgery and postoperative fibrosis. Although most patients improve after reoperation, persistent systems are likely and failure is more frequent than after primary carpal tunnel surgery. Risk factors for failure following reoperation include the presence of an active Worker's Compensation claim, pain in the ulnar nerve distribution, and the absence of abnormality on preoperative EMG.  相似文献   

12.
Operative procedures used to treat Kienb?ck's disease have been biomechanically evaluated experimentally. We have shown that joint leveling procedures, such as radial shortening and ulnar lengthening, experimentally unload the ulna and the radial lunate fossa. For wrists with neutral ulnar variance, a lateral opening or medial closing radial wedge procedure unloads the radial lunate fossa. Scapho-trapezio-trapezoidal fusion and scapho-capitate fusion also unload the radial lunate fossa but at the expense of loading the adjacent joints. Neither a capitate-hamate fusion nor a carpal tunnel release alter the radial ulnar carpal joint loading.  相似文献   

13.
To investigate the value of motor sensory differentiated nerve repair, we examined a group of 9 patients with motor sensory differentiated nerve repair and a group of 13 patients without motor sensory differentiated nerve repair. The clinical and electroneurographic findings were compared. For the clinical examination, Millesi's scoring system was used. The hand function after motor sensory differentiated median nerve repair was 72% +/- 16% compared with 57% +/- 14% without motor sensory differentiation. The hand function after motor sensory differentiated median and ulnar nerve repair was 53% +/- 12% compared with 43% +/- 24% without motor sensory differentiation. After ulnar nerve repair the achieved values for hand function were high even without motor sensory differentiation. Our results indicate that intraoperative motor sensory differentiation of injured nerves is helpful to reestablish particularly the sensory function in median nerve injuries.  相似文献   

14.
The purpose of the present study was to identify the incidence of hand symptoms related to pregnancy in a Danish population. Three hundred and thirty-five consecutive postpartum patients were interviewed by questionnaire. Hand symptoms had been noted by 16%, among these 30% described a classic median-nerve symptom distribution (carpal tunnel syndrome) and 24% of patients described an ulnar nerve distribution. Most symptoms were bilateral, commenced in the third trimester and resolved soon after delivery. There was a significant correlation of hand symptoms in pregnancy with the presence of swelling and a significant correlation to parity (first). Hand function and sleep had been disturbed in half of the patients. Half of the patients had mentioned their symptoms to their doctor and one had been sent to treatment. Hand symptoms during pregnancy are common, and their severity is often underestimated. Symptoms of the carpal tunnel syndrome are easily relieved by a night splint.  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.
Correction factors exist to allow for the dramatic effect that temperature has on nerve conduction study parameters. However, these are based on normal nerves in normal individuals and may not be appropriate in the diseased nerve setting. Our clinical study showed that in carpal tunnel syndrome, the median nerve reacts differently to temperature changes compared with normal ulnar controls. Furthermore, statistically significant differences exist between the rates of change with increasing temperature in motor and sensory nerves.  相似文献   

17.
Two patients exhibited chronic, slightly asymmetric weakness and wasting with fasciculations of the upper limb and hand muscles. Motor nerve conduction studies showed features of multifocal conduction block in nerve segments other than those usually involved in entrapment syndromes. The F wave was markedly delayed in the median and ulnar nerves. Transcranial cortical and cervical root magnetic stimulation showed bilaterally delayed thenar responses with normal central conduction time. Needle electromyography demonstrated a chronic denervation pattern with large polyphasic motor units in several muscles of the upper limbs. Sensory symptoms were mild and limited to paresthesias in the fingertips. Sensory nerve conduction velocity and sensory nerve action potential amplitudes were normal in elbow-to-wrist and wrist-to-finger segments of the median and ulnar nerves, but there was a delayed cortical response and unrecognizable Erb's point and cervical responses in the somatosensory evoked potentials to median nerve electrical stimulation. Electrophysiologic examination was normal in most nerves of the lower limbs. These two patients, meeting clinical and electrophysiologic criteria of multifocal neuropathy with conduction block, demonstrate that sensory fibers may also be involved in this syndrome.  相似文献   

18.
Thirty-six consecutive patients with 37 complete tears of the ulnar collateral ligament of the thumb metacarpophalangeal (MP) joint were treated with primary repair using a miniature intraosseous suture anchor. Thirty patients were evaluated by clinical examination or by questionnaire at an average of 11 months after repair. Loss of interphalangeal joint motion averaged 15 degrees on the involved side versus the other side, while loss of MP joint motion averaged 10 degrees. There was no significant difference on stress testing measurements between repaired and nonrepaired thumbs. There were no instances of nerve injury, infection, device failure, or reoperation. The authors concluded that this is a safe and effective method for repair of complete tears of the ulnar collateral ligament of the thumb MP joint.  相似文献   

19.
Relative frequency of entrapment neuropathies was studied from amongst the patients referred to an electrodiagnostic medicine laboratory for electrophysiological studies. During the study period electrophysiological procedures were done on 650 patients with various peripheral nerve disorders. The entrapment neuropathies constituted 8.5%. Carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) was the commonest entrapment neuropathy (83.6%). Diagnosis of CTS was established in 84 Patients referred with the diagnosis of CTS. Electrophysiological tests confirmed the diagnosis of thoracic outlet syndrome in 4 (15.4%) of the 26 patients referred with this diagnosis and in 5 (19.3%) of them the diagnosis turned out to be CTS. Diagnosis of cubital tunnel syndrome was not suspected clinically in all the 3 patients, they were referred with the diagnosis of ulnar neuropathy. In both the patients with tarsal tunnel syndrome the initial diagnosis was peripheral neuropathy.  相似文献   

20.
In the repair of the defect of peripheral nerve, it was necessary to find an operative method with excellent therapeutic effect but simple technique. Based on the experimental study, one case of old injury of the ulnar nerve was treated by end-to-side neurorraphy with the intact median nerve. In this case the nerve defect was over 3 cm and unable to be sutured directly. The patient was followed up for fourteen months after the operation. The recovery of the sensation and the myodynamia was evaluated. The results showed that: the sensation and the motor function innervated by ulnar nerve were recovered. The function of the hand was almost recovered to be normal. It was proved that the end-to-side neurorraphy between the distal stump with the intact median nerve to repair the defect of the ulnar nerve was a new operative procedure for nerve repair. Clinically it had good effect with little operative difficulty. This would give a bright prospect to repair of peripheral nerve defect in the future.  相似文献   

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