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Cross‐sectional area of the median nerve at the wrist: Comparison of sonographic, MRI, and cadaveric measurements
Author(s) -
Lee Ryan K. L.,
Griffith James F.,
Ng Alex W. H.,
Tipoe George L.,
Chan Anthony W. H.,
Wong Clara W. Y.,
Tse Wing Lim,
Ho Pak Cheong
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of clinical ultrasound
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.272
H-Index - 61
eISSN - 1097-0096
pISSN - 0091-2751
DOI - 10.1002/jcu.22647
Subject(s) - cadaveric spasm , medicine , median nerve , ultrasound , wrist , magnetic resonance imaging , cadaver , carpal tunnel syndrome , carpal tunnel , forearm , nuclear medicine , anatomy , radiology
Background This study compares median nerve cross‐sectional area (CSA) measurements at the wrist obtained with ultrasound (US) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) using cadaveric measurements as the gold standard. Methods Median nerve CSA was measured using US and MRI in 9 cadaveric wrists obtained from 5 subjects at 5 locations: distal forearm, proximal to tunnel inlet, at tunnel inlet, at tunnel outlet, and distal to tunnel outlet and then on identical cadaveric transverse sections obtained with a bandsaw. All US, MRI, and cadaveric measurements were repeated to determine reliability. Median nerves of 10 patients with clinical carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) were measured with US and MRI using an identical method US. Results Median nerve CSA MRI measurements correlated better (Pearson correlation: 0.80‐0.95, P  < .05) with cadaveric measurements than with US measurements (Pearson correlation: 0.61‐0.79, P  < .05). Median nerve CSA US measurements (8.6‐12.5 mm 2 , P  < .05) were smaller at all levels than MRI (11.3‐14.7 mm 2 ) or cadaveric (11.0‐14.9 mm 2 ) measurements while MRI and cadaver measurements were similar at all levels. Median nerve CSA MRI measurements in CTS patients were larger than US measurements at all levels. Conclusion Median nerve CSA measurements by MRI are larger than US measurements and correlated better with cadaveric measurements. Median nerve CSA criteria used for diagnosing CTS on US are not likely to be applicable to MRI.

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