STUDY OF UPPER LIMB PERIPHERAL NERVE PATHOLOGIES WITH SPECIAL EMPHASIS ON QUICK DASH SCORE AND SELECTED ELECTROMYOGRAPHIC PARAMETERS
Journal Title: Journal of Evolution of Medical and Dental Sciences - Year 2018, Vol 7, Issue 4
Abstract
BACKGROUND Clinical disability or inability to use full function of upper limb and EMG can be a guide to assess probability of severity of pathological damage. Pathologies like neuropraxia, axonotmesis and neurotmesis have varied disability presentation and EMG findings. Hence, disability scores and EMG can correlate well with peripheral nerve pathologies. The purpose of this study is evaluation of peripheral nerve pathologies using disability score and electromyographic (EMG) findings. MATERIALS AND METHODS Study design was hospital-based cross-sectional study, which was conducted in outpatient medical and surgical department of MY Hospital, Indore, in patients of upper limb peripheral nerve pathologies with intention of identifying the selected epidemiological variables along with measurement of quick DASH (Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder and Hand score) and analysing the electromyographic findings. Study was conducted over a period of one year from January 2015 to December 2015. RESULTS There were 51 patients (mean age 36; SD, 11.7 years) with peripheral nerve pathologies (n= 39) and traumatic injuries (n= 12). Female-to-male ratio was 2.18: 1. Mean quick DASH score was 61.35 (SD, 20.5) of 100. For traumatic patients mean quick DASH score was 83.25 (SD, 13.13) and for non-traumatic patients it was 57.41 (SD, 14.65). Electromyographic parameter of voluntary muscle activity and recruitment were absent in all of the twelve traumatic injury patients and it was present in other thirty-nine non-traumatic neuropathies. Electromyographic finding of spontaneous potential was observed in all the 51 patients. CONCLUSION High quick DASH scores are found in traumatic injury patients. In non-traumatic neuropathies, the quick DASH scores are quite disabling but not that high. Electromyographic findings in traumatic injuries are suggestive of neurotmesis. Finding of spontaneous activity in all the patients suggest active denervation (axonotmesis or neurotmesis) and it warrants aggressive treatment.
Authors and Affiliations
Archana Verma, Sachin Verma, Sonia Moses, Rajkumar Mathur, Lukesh Patil5, Siddharth Saraf, Abhishek Verma, Sharad Gova
MANAGEMENT OF DEGLOVING INJURIES OF THE HAND USING ABDOMINAL FLAPS- A RELIABLE AND DURABLE RECONSTRUCTIVE OPTION
BACKGROUND Degloving injuries of the hand are quite common due to industrial injuries and road traffic accidents. In most of the cases, only the skin and subcutaneous tissue is avulsed leaving behind intact tendons and v...
APPROACH TO THROMBOCYTOPENIA- A CLINICOPATHOLOGICAL STUDY
BACKGROUND Thrombocytopenia is defined as decreased number of platelets below 1.0 lakh/μL1and it may be due to one of four causes: Decreased production, increased destruction, bone marrow failure or splenic sequestration...
EVALUATION OF THE ROLE OF DR JOSHI’S EXTERNAL FIXATOR IN MANAGEMENT OF COMPLEX AND COMPOUND MUTILATING INJURIES OF HANDS AND FOREARM.
The human body is an amalgamation of many fundamental units put together. Amongst these hands have got a very distinct and important role. Injuries, diseases, and surgical interference therefore do much more ha...
MR IMAGING DETECTED BREAST LESIONS- HISTOPATHOLOGICAL CORRELATION OF QUALITATIVE LESION CHARACTERISTICS
BACKGROUND Contrast-enhanced MR imaging of breast characterises the lesion more accurately than mammography or sonography. This contributes to the distinction between benign and malignant lesions. Multifocal and contrala...
FINE NEEDLE ASPIRATION CYTOLOGY STUDY OF CERVICAL LYMPHADENOPATHY
BACKGROUND The current study is a descriptive study done at a tertiary care hospital to evaluate the significance of the diagnostic technique of fine needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) in cervical lymphadenopathy and to s...