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02-01-2024 | Mononeuropathy | Scientific Article

Iatrogenic “overshoot” nerve injuries: imaging features

Authors: Yoshimi Endo, Ogonna K. Nwawka, Darryl B. Sneag

Published in: Skeletal Radiology | Issue 6/2024

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Abstract

Objective

Describe features of iatrogenic “overshoot” nerve injuries on ultrasound and MRI, which occur when an instrument passes through the bone and injures the nerve after it penetrates the opposite cortex.

Materials and methods

After a keyword search of the radiology database at a tertiary care orthopedic hospital from January 2016 to December 2022, those fulfilling the inclusion criteria of (1) instrumentation through the bone during surgery, (2) acute neuropathy immediately after surgery, (3) nerve injury confirmed on electrodiagnostics, and (4) imaging consistent with overshoot nerve injury were included. Imaging studies were retrospectively evaluated to determine primary and secondary signs of an overshoot nerve injury.

Results

Six patients (3 females, mean age 26.7 (range 10–49) years) had nerve injury fitting the mechanism of injury: 3 injuries to the radial nerve during fixation of distal humerus fractures, 1 tibial nerve and 1 superficial peroneal nerve injury during fixation of tibial fractures, and 1 posterior interosseous nerve injury during biceps tendon repair. Ultrasounds were performed in all while 4 also had MRI. Secondary signs included (1) cortical defect adjacent to injured nerve (n=2); (2) scar extending from bone to injured nerve (n=2); (3) screw tip pointing to injured nerve (n=1, 4) tract in bone on MRI from previous instrumentation pointing to injured nerve (n=2).

Conclusion

In addition to primary signs such as laceration or neuroma, secondary signs of “overshoot” nerve injury include cortical defect, scar extending to nerve, screw tip pointing to nerve, and linear tract in the bone on MRI.
Literature
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Metadata
Title
Iatrogenic “overshoot” nerve injuries: imaging features
Authors
Yoshimi Endo
Ogonna K. Nwawka
Darryl B. Sneag
Publication date
02-01-2024
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Keyword
Mononeuropathy
Published in
Skeletal Radiology / Issue 6/2024
Print ISSN: 0364-2348
Electronic ISSN: 1432-2161
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00256-023-04550-x

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