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CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME Nerve Conduction Study Katie Doney – [email protected] www.teleemg.co m
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Page 1: CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME Nerve Conduction Study Katie Doney – kdoney@med.usyd.edu.au .

CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROMENerve Conduction Study

Katie Doney – [email protected]

www.teleemg.com

Page 2: CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME Nerve Conduction Study Katie Doney – kdoney@med.usyd.edu.au .

Motor Pathways

Ventral Horn

CNS Motor Neuron

Muscle

Page 3: CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME Nerve Conduction Study Katie Doney – kdoney@med.usyd.edu.au .

Motor Pathways Possible places of dysfunction

1. CNS

1. EEGElectroencephalography

2. PETPositron Emission Tomography

3. fMRIFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging

Page 4: CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME Nerve Conduction Study Katie Doney – kdoney@med.usyd.edu.au .

Motor Pathways Possible places of dysfunction

2. Muscle

Needle EMG Electromyography

1. CNS

1. EEGElectroencephalography

2. PETPositron Emission Tomography

3. fMRIFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging

Page 5: CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME Nerve Conduction Study Katie Doney – kdoney@med.usyd.edu.au .

Motor Pathways Possible places of dysfunction

2. Muscle

Needle EMG Electromyography

1. CNS

1. EEGElectroencephalography

2. PETPositron Emission Tomography

3. fMRIFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging 3. Peripheral Nerve

Nerve conduction study

Page 6: CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME Nerve Conduction Study Katie Doney – kdoney@med.usyd.edu.au .

Peripheral Nerve

• Made up of:- Sensory nerves

- Motor nerves

- Myelin

- Glial cells

MEDIAN ULNAR

Page 7: CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME Nerve Conduction Study Katie Doney – kdoney@med.usyd.edu.au .

Median Nerve Pathologyin Carpal Tunnel Syndrome

• Compression of the median nerve results in

Demyelination Axonal degeneration

Decreased blood supply

• These manifest as: - Numbness

- Pain

- Parasthesiae

- Weakness

- Problems with fine manipulative skills

Page 8: CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME Nerve Conduction Study Katie Doney – kdoney@med.usyd.edu.au .

Nerve Conduction Study• Stimulate nerve and record outcome.

• 2 main types

1. Motor (record compound muscle action potential)

2. Sensory (record compound sensory action potential)

-Orthodromic (stimulate at finger, record on elbow/wrist)

-Antidromic (stimulate at elbow/wrist, record on finger)

-Radial-median (stimulate at wrist, record on thumb)

-Palmar (stimulate at palm, record on elbow/wrist)Most sensitive

Least sensitive

Page 9: CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME Nerve Conduction Study Katie Doney – kdoney@med.usyd.edu.au .

Changes to CMAP in Carpal Tunnel Syndrome

-Latency: Normal < 4.9 ms

-Amplitude: Normal ≥ 5 mV

-Shape: Normal curve

Time

Response amplitude

Pathology: - demyelination

- axonal degeneration

Page 10: CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME Nerve Conduction Study Katie Doney – kdoney@med.usyd.edu.au .

Nerve Conduction Study

• Measures Latency and Amplitude– Latency is the time between the artefact and

the initiation of the compound action potential– The artefact occurs when you press the button

to stimulate the electrode– Latency increases pathologically due to:

– Axonal degeneration– Demyelination

– Latency increases non-pathologically due to:– Length of axon

Page 11: CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME Nerve Conduction Study Katie Doney – kdoney@med.usyd.edu.au .

Nerve Conduction Study

• Measures Latency and Amplitude– The amplitude of the curve shows the strength

of the compound action potential– The area under the curve decreases

pathologically due to:– Number of axons involved

» Diameter of nerve

– The area under the curve decreases non-pathologically due to:

– Strength of initial stimulus

Page 12: CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME Nerve Conduction Study Katie Doney – kdoney@med.usyd.edu.au .

Nerve Conduction Study

• Motor Nerve Conduction Study Setup:– Stimulating electrode to set up action

potentials in median nerve from wrist or elbow

– Recording electrode on abductor pollicus brevis to record compound muscle action potential

– Techniques to increase effectiveness of stimulation

– Earth

Page 13: CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME Nerve Conduction Study Katie Doney – kdoney@med.usyd.edu.au .

Conduction Velocity

• Importance: Eliminating wrong localisation of problem

• Method:

1

sw

r

Latency wrist

2

se

r

Latency elbow

Page 14: CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME Nerve Conduction Study Katie Doney – kdoney@med.usyd.edu.au .

Conduction Velocity

• Calculations: Velocity =

• Method:

1

sw

r

Latency wrist

2

se

r

Latency elbow

Distance

DistanceTime

Distance Lelbow – Lwrist

=

Page 15: CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME Nerve Conduction Study Katie Doney – kdoney@med.usyd.edu.au .

Conduction Velocity

• Normal value > 50 m/s

• Other sources of error

– stimulus position

- estimation of nerve course

- latency measurement

Page 16: CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME Nerve Conduction Study Katie Doney – kdoney@med.usyd.edu.au .

Problems with comparing features to normal values

• Features change with– Temperature – Age

Age20 80

Latency

Age

CV

• Solution: Repeat measurements on ulnar nerve as a control. This also gives additional evidence to rule out generalised neuropathy.

Page 17: CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME Nerve Conduction Study Katie Doney – kdoney@med.usyd.edu.au .

Compound Antidromic Sensory Action Potential

Setup:

- stimulate at wrist/elbow and record at finger

- gain set higher

- signal very small so average random noise

• Normal values:

- Latency < 3.6 ms- Velocity > 50 m/s- Amplitude > 15 V

- Latency < 3.1 ms- Velocity > 54 m/s- Amplitude > 10 V

MEDIAN SENSORY (ANTIDROMIC) ULNAR SENSORY (ANTIDROMIC)

Page 18: CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME Nerve Conduction Study Katie Doney – kdoney@med.usyd.edu.au .

An example:Right Antidromic Ulnar Normal:

-Lat < 3.1 ms

-Amp > 10 uV

…. Ulnar OK – not generalised neuropathy

Page 19: CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME Nerve Conduction Study Katie Doney – kdoney@med.usyd.edu.au .

An example:Right Antidromic Median Normal:

-Lat <3.6 ms

-Amp >15 uV

-CV >50 m/s

…. In median nerve, evidence of demyelination and axonal degeneration between wrist and finger, but not between wrist and elbow. Suggestive of carpal tunnel syndrome.

Page 20: CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME Nerve Conduction Study Katie Doney – kdoney@med.usyd.edu.au .

An example:Right Thenar Median Normal:

- Lat < 4.9 ms

- Amp ≥ 5 mV

- CV > 50 m/s

…. Motor portion of median is OK. Mild to moderate carpal tunnel syndrome.

Page 21: CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME Nerve Conduction Study Katie Doney – kdoney@med.usyd.edu.au .

Take home message!

• In carpal tunnel syndrome there will be a longer latency between the wrist and the finger/thenar eminence but NOT between the elbow and the wrist

• The ulnar nerve will not be effected in carpal tunnel syndrome because it does not pass through the carpal tunnel