nerve injuries: pns reaction & emg findings §william mckinley md §associate professor pm&r...

25
Nerve Injuries: PNS reaction & EMG findings William McKinley MD Associate Professor PM&R Virginia Commonwealth University

Upload: deborah-mosley

Post on 22-Dec-2015

221 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Nerve Injuries: PNS reaction & EMG findings §William McKinley MD §Associate Professor PM&R §Virginia Commonwealth University

Nerve Injuries: PNS reaction & EMG findings

William McKinley MDAssociate Professor PM&R

Virginia Commonwealth University

Page 2: Nerve Injuries: PNS reaction & EMG findings §William McKinley MD §Associate Professor PM&R §Virginia Commonwealth University

Normal Nerve Anatomy

AxonMyelin sheath with schwann cell

Nodes of Ranvier (more Na+ channels) Internodal region

Connective tissue coverings Endoneurium (surrounds nerve axon fibers) Perineurium (surrounds fiber groups to form a

fascicle) Epineural (binds fascicles into nerves)

Page 3: Nerve Injuries: PNS reaction & EMG findings §William McKinley MD §Associate Professor PM&R §Virginia Commonwealth University
Page 4: Nerve Injuries: PNS reaction & EMG findings §William McKinley MD §Associate Professor PM&R §Virginia Commonwealth University

Pathophysiology of Nerve Injury

Ischemia & pressure will decrease intraneural flow

Ischemia: 15-45 min causes neuropraxia (reversible) > 8 hrs is NOT reversible

Stretch 5-10% leads to nerve elongation

Page 5: Nerve Injuries: PNS reaction & EMG findings §William McKinley MD §Associate Professor PM&R §Virginia Commonwealth University

Pathophysiology (cont)Mechanical pressure leads to structural changes

largest fibers (motor, vib, proprioception) peripheral fibers

Pressure: pressure 30mmHg blocks venous bl flow pressure 30-60mmHg blocks axonal transport pressure 60-120mmHg blocks intraneural blood

flow

Chronic pressure leads to perinodal demyelination

Page 6: Nerve Injuries: PNS reaction & EMG findings §William McKinley MD §Associate Professor PM&R §Virginia Commonwealth University

Demyelination

It is not uncommon for a disease process to preferentially injure the nerve’s myelin Chronic ETOH, DM, lead, diptheria, porphyria

Damaged myelin is removed / replaced (Demyelination / re-myelination)

In profound demyelinating diseases, it is not uncommon to see secondary axonal injury

Page 7: Nerve Injuries: PNS reaction & EMG findings §William McKinley MD §Associate Professor PM&R §Virginia Commonwealth University

Axonal Injury

Wallarian degeneration - Secondary axon degeneration distal to site of injury

Also see some axonal degeneration proximally along with nerve cell body alterations due to edema and blocked axonal flow/transport

Page 8: Nerve Injuries: PNS reaction & EMG findings §William McKinley MD §Associate Professor PM&R §Virginia Commonwealth University

Nerve Regeneration

Distal portion of surviving axon begins to swell & sprouts “growth cone” (4-8 weeks)

Re-growth rates .5-5 mm/d (1 inch/mo) small diameter, initially unmyelinated

Remyelination (proximal-distal, matures at 1 year) slower cond velocity (more nodes of Ranvier)

Page 9: Nerve Injuries: PNS reaction & EMG findings §William McKinley MD §Associate Professor PM&R §Virginia Commonwealth University

Nerve Re-innervation

Endoneurial tube (ET) - re-innervation occurs thru ET to distal target site

Recovery plateaus 18-24 months Physical separation of ET leads to poor prognosis

misdirection of nerve sprouting less common with compression injuries

Muscle atrophy seen if not re-innervated by 1-1.5 yrs

Page 10: Nerve Injuries: PNS reaction & EMG findings §William McKinley MD §Associate Professor PM&R §Virginia Commonwealth University
Page 11: Nerve Injuries: PNS reaction & EMG findings §William McKinley MD §Associate Professor PM&R §Virginia Commonwealth University

Categories of Nerve Injury

1. Minimal - rapidly reversible conduction block, slowing of nerve conduction (primarily affects FF fibers)

2. Intermediate - focal demyelination w/o axonal damage, prolonged conduction block

3. Severe - Axonal damage with wallerian degeneration

Page 12: Nerve Injuries: PNS reaction & EMG findings §William McKinley MD §Associate Professor PM&R §Virginia Commonwealth University

Classification of Nerve Injury

Seddon’s Classification - based on amount of nerve injury Neuropraxia (mild conduction block) Axonotmesis (axon disruption with intact

endoneurium) Neurotmesis (axon disruption with loss of

endoneurium)

Page 13: Nerve Injuries: PNS reaction & EMG findings §William McKinley MD §Associate Professor PM&R §Virginia Commonwealth University

Neuropraxia“Conduction block”no axonal degeneration large myelinated fibers more susceptible to

compression, ischemia (motor) Nerve conduction is normal distally, but altered

across “injury” site Needle EMG shows decreased recruitment, but

no abnormal spontaneous potentials Normal Conduction returns in days/weeks (due

to re-myelination of damaged segment)

Page 14: Nerve Injuries: PNS reaction & EMG findings §William McKinley MD §Associate Professor PM&R §Virginia Commonwealth University

Axonotmesis

Axon damage w/ preservation of endoneurium, perineurium & epineurium Etiology - compression, traction

Wallerian Degeneration of axon Motor NCS lost day 4-7 (NMJ fragmentation) Sensory NCS lost day 8-10

Preservation of endoneurium allows for regeneration with re-innervation Recovery time dependent on distance for re-

innervation

Page 15: Nerve Injuries: PNS reaction & EMG findings §William McKinley MD §Associate Professor PM&R §Virginia Commonwealth University

Neurotmesis

Disruption of axon, endoneurium & connective tissue (perineurium & epineurium)

Poor prognosis for re-innervation

Page 16: Nerve Injuries: PNS reaction & EMG findings §William McKinley MD §Associate Professor PM&R §Virginia Commonwealth University

Sunderland’s Classificationof Nerve Injury

1. Conduction block (Seddon’s 1)2. Axonotmesis (Seddon’s 2)3. Loss of endoneurium4. Loss of perineurium5. Loss of epineurium

Page 17: Nerve Injuries: PNS reaction & EMG findings §William McKinley MD §Associate Professor PM&R §Virginia Commonwealth University
Page 18: Nerve Injuries: PNS reaction & EMG findings §William McKinley MD §Associate Professor PM&R §Virginia Commonwealth University

Electrodiagnostic Findings in Nerve injury (summary)

Neuropraxia (Np) Decreased evoked

potential (EP) with proximal stimulus

Normal EP distal Decreased recruitment No EMG abnormalities

Axonotmesis Day 0-3: same as Np Day 4-7: decreased motor

amplitude Day 8-10: decreased

sensory amplitude Day 10-14: abnormal

spontaneous potentials on EMG (PSW, Fibs)

Month 6-12: “nascent pot’s (S>M) & “jitter”

Page 19: Nerve Injuries: PNS reaction & EMG findings §William McKinley MD §Associate Professor PM&R §Virginia Commonwealth University

Edx findings (cont)

Performing Edx too early may lead to misleading information (wait 2-4 weeks)

An early sign of axonotmesis is decreased CMAP amplitude > 30-40% lower than contralateral side

Repeat in 2 weeks

Page 20: Nerve Injuries: PNS reaction & EMG findings §William McKinley MD §Associate Professor PM&R §Virginia Commonwealth University

Conduction Block

Focal site of demyelinationDecreased amplitude on proximal stimulation

(normal distally)On proximal stimulation:

decreased amplitude & decreased “area” (less fibers conducting, but speed preserved)

(consider axonal loss if amplitude decreased proximally AND distally)

Page 21: Nerve Injuries: PNS reaction & EMG findings §William McKinley MD §Associate Professor PM&R §Virginia Commonwealth University

“Mixed” Demyelinative/Axonal Injuries

“Common” to present in this way as opposed to “purely” one or the other

Criteria for predominant etiology: Demyelination present if...:

• NCV < 80% (LLN) if Amplitude > 80% • NCV < 70% (LLN) if Amplitude < 80%• distal latency >125% if Amplitude > 80%• distal latency >150% if Amplitude < 80%

– (LLN = lower limits of normal)

Page 22: Nerve Injuries: PNS reaction & EMG findings §William McKinley MD §Associate Professor PM&R §Virginia Commonwealth University
Page 23: Nerve Injuries: PNS reaction & EMG findings §William McKinley MD §Associate Professor PM&R §Virginia Commonwealth University

Clinical Case

Axonotmesis amplitude decreased area decreased duration decreased

Demyelination amplitude decreased area similar duration increased

Page 24: Nerve Injuries: PNS reaction & EMG findings §William McKinley MD §Associate Professor PM&R §Virginia Commonwealth University
Page 25: Nerve Injuries: PNS reaction & EMG findings §William McKinley MD §Associate Professor PM&R §Virginia Commonwealth University