Experience of endoscopic transcapsular axillary nerve decompression: a series of clinical cases
Автор: Belyak Evgeniy A., Paskhin Dmitry L., Lazko Fedor L., Asratyan Sarkis A., Prizov Aleksey P., Smirnov Daniil S., Lazko Maxim F.
Журнал: Клиническая практика @clinpractice
Рубрика: Клинические случаи
Статья в выпуске: 4 т.13, 2022 года.
Бесплатный доступ
Background: Posttraumatic axillary nerve neuropathy is a widely spread pathology, more often seen after a shoulder joint trauma. It can also appear as a complication after orthopedic surgeries, for example, after the Latarjet procedure for shoulder stabilization. The technique of open axillary nerve decompression is very popular but has a number of disadvantages: a large trauma of soft tissue, severe bleeding, a high rate of complications, and also a poor cosmetic effect. The endoscopic surgical technique of decompression is an effective and less traumatic alternative to open procedures. Clinical case description: We present the results of endoscopic transcapsular axillary nerve decompression in 5 patients with a clinical picture of neuropathic pain syndrome, hypoesthesia in the deltoid area, hypotrophy of the deltoid muscle, who were operated from 2018 to 2021. The mean age of patients was 44.4±14.9. An original surgical technique of decompression was developed and applied to all the patients which included arthroscopy of the shoulder joint with diagnostic and treatment components and transcapsular endoscopic axillary nerve decompression in the beach-chair position. The statistical analysis was performed using the Mann-Whitney U test. According to the VAS-scale, the severity of pain syndrome before the surgery was 6±4.6 points, while 6 months after the surgery it decreased to 1.4±0.5 points (p function show_eabstract() { $('#eabstract1').hide(); $('#eabstract2').show(); $('#eabstract_expand').hide(); }
Axillary nerve, endoscopic decompression, neuropathy, neuropathic pain syndrome, shoulder arthroscopy
Короткий адрес: https://sciup.org/143179877
IDR: 143179877 | DOI: 10.17816/clinpract114767