Ultrasonography evaluation of peripheral nerve injuries after an earthquake

Multiple previous studies of earthquake injuries have focused mainly on crush syndrome, fractures, infections, and rhabdomyolysis. Published data on peripheral nerve injury are very limited and there is no report of the findings on ultrasonographic scans. Dr. Man Lu and co-workers from Sichuan Provincial People's Hospital in China evaluated 34 patients with persistent clinical symptoms and neurologic signs of impaired nerve function, who were selected from 211 patients with clinical signs of impaired peripheral nerves wounded in the Wenchuan earthquake undergoing clinical examination, electrodiagnostic tests, and sonography. Among the 34 patients, the concordance rate of ultrasonography findings with those of surgical results was 98%. Postoperative ul¬trasound follow-up revealed that the majority of patients (86%) had a good recovery after neurolysis, anastomosis or transplantation, showing the better concordance between clinical outcomes and ultrasonographic outcomes. Preoperative and postoperative clinical and ultrasonographic results were concordant, which verified that ultrasonography is useful for preoperative diagnosis and postoperative evaluation of injured peripheral nerves. These findings have been published in the Neural Regeneration Research.

High-frequency sonography shows the median nerve (arrow) that is completely disrupted with a hypoechoic terminal neuroma (star) at the ending of the proximal stumps.

(Photo Credit: Neural Regeneration Research)

Source: Neural Regeneration Research