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Nerve ultrasound in emergency room: a case of traumatic ischiatic nerve neurotmesis
Author(s) -
Nicola Romano,
Jeries Paolo Zawaideh,
Aldo Fischetti,
Caterina Lapucci,
Sergio Gennaro,
Alessandro Muda
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
medical ultrasonography
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.473
H-Index - 28
eISSN - 2066-8643
pISSN - 1844-4172
DOI - 10.11152/mu-1446
Subject(s) - medicine , perineurium , emergency ultrasound , ultrasound , neurosurgery , peripheral nerve , surgery , radiology , anatomy
A 22 years-old-man was admitted to emergency after trauma. He suffered multiple deep cuts on his left leg. A lesion of the ischiatic nerve was suspected, and an ultrasound (US) evaluation was requested to confirm it. The study was conducted in the emergency room using a linear ultrasound transducer of 6-15 MHz and demonstrated the completely truncation of the ischiatic nerve (neurotmesis - Sunderland Grade V) with the proximal end retracted up to about 3cm from the edge of the wound. It was a very useful information for the neurosurgeon who after performed an end-to-end neurorrhaphy with suturation of perineurium. This short report underlines the importance of US, that thanks to its high spatial resolution and its time- and cost-effectiveness, can be considered a very important tool for the physician in emergency room to characterize peripheral nerve lesions.

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