| Literature DB >> 25289024 |
Cui Qing1, Jianhua Zhang1, Shidong Wu1, Zhao Ling1, Shuanchi Wang1, Haoran Li1, Haiqing Li1.
Abstract
The aim of the present study was to investigate a new clinical classification of cubital tunnel syndrome that provides an improved basis for the clinical diagnosis and treatment of the disease. Retrospective analysis was performed on 341 patients with cubital tunnel syndrome. Based on the etiology, signs and symptoms, neurophysiological tests and computed tomography (CT) imaging, a new clinical classification was proposed. The patients enrolled in the study were treated according to the new classification. According to the new classification, cubital tunnel syndrome cases were divided into types I-IV. Treatment for patients with type I consisted of rest, immobilization or physiotherapy, while patients with type II received simple ulnar neurolysis. Type III patients underwent ulnar neurolysis with expansion of the ulnar nerve sulcus or ulnar nerve anterior transposition surgery. Type IV patients represented a subgroup of cubital tunnel syndrome cases caused by factors other than degenerative joint diseases, including cysts, tumors, traumatic fracture, deformity and elbow deformity. Patients of this type received appropriate surgical treatment according to the specific etiology. Based on previous classifications that relied on sensation and strength symptoms, a new clinical classification of elbow tunnel syndrome has been established in the present study that adopts a CT imaging evaluation index. The new classification is reasonable, simple and practical, and therapies based on this classification are more targeted than those based on previous classifications.Entities:
Keywords: classification; cubital tunnel syndrome; treatment
Year: 2014 PMID: 25289024 PMCID: PMC4186332 DOI: 10.3892/etm.2014.1983
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Ther Med ISSN: 1792-0981 Impact factor: 2.447
Gu’s classification of cubital tunnel syndrome (7).
| Classification | Sensation | Movement | Claw-shaped hands | EMG | Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mild | Intermittent vibration paresthesia | Conscious weakness, poor flexibility | − | >40 | Conservative |
| Moderate | Intermittent tingling paresthesia | Weak grip strength, finger adduction and abduction confined | − | 40-30 | Decompression |
| Severe | Persistent paresthesia, 2-PD abnormal | Muscle atrophy, failure of the fingers to adduct and abduct | + | <30 | Anterior transposition |
Ulnar nerve conduction velocity.
EMG, electromyography; 2-PD, two-point discrimination.
Figure 1Positioning of a normal adult cubital tunnel at 30° for a flat CT scan. CT, computed tomography.
Figure 2Normal adult cubital tunnel at 30° for a flat CT scan. CT, computed tomography.
Cubital tunnel depths, widths and depth/width ratios at various angles in the left and right elbows of normal adults (mean ± SD).
| 0° | 15° | 30° | |||||||
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| Group | Depth, mm | Width, mm | Depth/width | Depth, mm | Width, mm | Depth/width | Depth, mm | Width, mm | Cubital tunnel index |
| Left elbow | 1.673±0.819 | 12.537±1.529 | 0.129±0.047 | 2.576±0.803 | 13.468±2.510 | 0.195±0.059 | 3.635±0.960 | 13.503±2.135 | 0.269±0.051 |
| Right elbow | 1.860±0.539 | 13.243±2.703 | 0.130±0.042 | 2.846±0.851 | 13.419±2.753 | 0.213±0.053 | 3.546±0.822 | 13.039±2.676 | 0.277±0.059 |
| t-value | 0.679 | 1.002 | 0.035 | 1.165 | 0.066 | 1.168 | 0.357 | 0.693 | 0.520 |
| P-value | >0.05 | >0.05 | >0.05 | >0.05 | >0.05 | >0.05 | >0.05 | >0.05 | >0.05 |
Classification and treatment selection for cubital tunnel syndrome.
| Types | Sensation | Movement | EMG | Imaging (X ray, CT or MRI) | Cubital tunnel index | Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type I | Ring and little finger numb, Tinel’s (+) | Conscious weakness, with or without action uncoordination | Normal | Normal | Normal | Movement control, rest, physiotherapy |
| Type II | Ring and little finger numb, Tinel’s (+) | Poor grip strength, decreased interosseous muscle strength or muscle atrophy | Motor and/or sensory nerve conduction velocity reduced | Normal | Normal | Ulnar neurolysis |
| Type III | Ring and little finger numb, Tinel’s (+) | Poor grip strength, decreased interosseous muscle strength or muscle atrophy | Motor and/or sensory nerve conduction velocity reduced | Osteoarthritis | Increased or decreased | Cubital tunnel expansion, ulnar nerve anterior transposition |
| Type IV | Ring and little finger numb, Tinel’s (+) | Conscious weakness, decreased interosseous muscle strength or muscle atrophy | Motor and/or sensory nerve conduction velocity reduced | Tumor, cysts, elbow deformity, post traumatic change | Normal | Targeted surgical treatment |
Depth/width ratio when the cross-section rotates 30° forward through the Hueter line (normal range, 0.273±0.055).
EMG, electromyography; CT, computed tomography; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging.
Distribution of patients with cubital tunnel syndrome according to the new and Dellon/Gu’s classification.
| Classification | Type I | Type II | Type III | Type IV |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mild | 27 | 0 | 59 | 3 |
| Moderate | 0 | 35 | 156 | 7 |
| Severe | 0 | 14 | 38 | 2 |
Among type IV cases, there were three cases of elbow valgus deformity, five cases of ulnar nerve adhesion following elbow trauma, three cases of elbow cysts and one case of humeral condyle bone cyst.