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Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery - British Volume, Vol 91-B, Issue 6,
762-765.
doi: 10.1302/0301-620X.91B6.22284 Copyright © 2009 by British Editorial Society of Bone and Joint Surgery Evaluation of peripheral nerves of the upper limb with ultrasonographyA COMPARISON OF ULTRASONOGRAPHIC EXAMINATION AND THE INTRA-OPERATIVE FINDINGST. Toros, MD, Orthopaedic Surgeon1; N. Karabay, MD, Radiologist1; K. Özaksar, MD, Orthopaedic Surgeon1; T. S. Sugun, MD, Orthopaedic Surgeon1; M. Kayalar, MD, Orthopaedic Surgeon1; and E. Bal, MD, Orthopaedic Surgeon11 Hand and Microsurgery Hospital, 1418 sok. No. 14, 35230 Kahramanlar-Izmir, Turkey. Correspondence should be sent to Dr T. Toros; e-mail: tulgartoros{at}yahoo.com
We prospectively studied 26 consecutive patients with clinically documented sensory or motor deficiency of a peripheral nerve due to trauma or entrapment using ultrasound, and in 19 cases surgical exploration of the nerves was undertaken. The ultrasonographic diagnoses were correlated with neurological examination and the surgical findings. Reliable visualisation of injured nerves on ultrasonography was achieved in all patients. Axonal swelling and hypoechogenity of the nerve was diagnosed in 15 cases, loss of continuity of a nerve bundle in 17, the formation of a neuroma of a stump in six, and partial laceration of a nerve with loss of the normal fascicular pattern in five. The ultrasonographic findings were confirmed at operation in those who had surgery. Ultrasound may be used for the evaluation of peripheral nerve injuries in the upper limb. High-resolution ultrasound can show the exact location, extent and type of lesion, yielding important information that might not be obtainable by other diagnostic aids.
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