| Literature DB >> 26016482 |
Nens van Alfen1, Jeroen J J van Eijk2, Tessa Ennik3, Sean O Flynn4, Inge E G Nobacht5, Jan T Groothuis6, Sigrid Pillen7, Floris A van de Laar8.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Neuralgic amyotrophy is considered a rare peripheral nervous system disorder but in practice seems grossly under recognized, which negatively affects care for these patients. In this study we prospectively counted the one-year incidence rate of classic neuralgic amyotrophy in a primary care setting.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26016482 PMCID: PMC4445915 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0128361
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
ICPC codes used for patient identification in this study.
| L01 | neck symptom / complaint |
| L04 | chest symptom / complaint |
| L08 | shoulder symptom / complaint |
| L09 | arm symptom / complaint |
| L18 | muscle pain |
| L83 | neck syndrome |
| L83.1 | cervical disk herniation |
| L92 | shoulder syndrome / frozen shoulder |
| N18 | paralysis / weakness |
| N94 | peripheral neuritis / neuropathy |
| N94.3 | thoracic outlet syndrome |
| N99 | neurological disease / other |
Presenting symptoms and exclusion criteria for considering neuralgic amyotrophy as a diagnosis.
| General practitioners were asked to consider the diagnosis when patients presented with: |
| • New onset shoulder pain (uni- or bilateral) |
| • NRS pain score of ≥7 on a scale of 0–10 |
| • Abnormal shoulder movement (glenohumeral and/or scapulothoracic) during maximum abduction/anteflexion movement |
| • When first seen ≥ 3 weeks after onset: paresis of long thoracic nerve, suprascapular nerve, anterior interosseus nerve |
| Optional signs and symptoms: |
| • Less severe initial pain with otherwise typical clinical multifocal distribution of weakness and monophasic course |
| • More extensive multifocal paresis of upper extremity (-ies) |
| • Asymmetric involvement of other upper extremity |
| • Areas of vital hypesthesia and/or paresthesia in the upper extremity |
| • Involvement of other peripheral nerves: lumbosacral plexus, phrenic, recurrent laryngeal nerve |
| Neuralgic amyotrophy was excluded when patients had: |
| • Progression of pain and/or weakness > 3 months (except for pain associated with abnormal compensatory shoulder movements) |
| • Only passive range of motion constraints in the glenohumeral joint |
| • Horner syndrome |
| • Perfectly symmetric weakness distribution |
| • Diabetes mellitus |
Fig 1Study flowchart.
NA = neuralgic amyotrophy.
Demographics and symptoms distribution between patient groups.
| Parameter | No NA (n = 470) | Probable NA (n = 8) | Definite NA (n = 14) | Chi2 p-value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N (percentage) | N (percentage) | N (percentage) | |||
| Sex | male | 202 (57%) | 6 (75%) | 9 (64%) | 0.06 |
| female | 268 (43%) | 2 (25%) | 5 (36%) | ||
| Onset age (years) | median | 44 | 46 | 41 | 0.37 |
| range | 0–101 | 31–59 | 30–69 | ||
| Affected side | left | 139 (33%) | 3 (38%) | 4 (28%) | 0.84 |
| right | 161 (38%) | 4 (50%) | 5 (36%) | ||
| bilateral | 119 (29%) | 1 (12%) | 5 (36%) | ||
| Pain at onset | yes | 437 (97%) | 7 (88%) | 14 (100%) | 0.23 |
| no | 13 (3%) | 1 (12%) | 0 (0%) | ||
| Pain distribution | 94 (45%) neck | 2 (40%) trapezius | 6 (43%) lateral arm |
| |
| 32 (15%) glenohumeral joint | 1 (10%) glenohumeral joint | 5 (36%) trapezius | |||
| 19 (9%) lateral arm | 1 (10%) scapula | 1 (7%) scapula | |||
| 15 (7%) trapezius | 1 (10%) lateral arm | 1 (7%) glenohumeral joint | |||
| 49 (23%) other | 3 (30%) missing | 1 (7%) whole arm | |||
| Weakness on physical exam | yes | 8 (2%) | 5 (63%) | 14 (100%) |
|
| no | 462 (98%) | 3 (27%) | 0 (0%) | ||
| Limited glenohumeral range of motion | yes | 111 (24%) | 1 (13%) | 6 (43%) | 0.19 |
| no | 359 (76%) | 7 (87%) | 8 (57%) | ||
| Sensory symptoms | yes | 63 (13%) | 6 (50%) | 8 (57%) |
|
| no | 407 (87%) | 6 (50%) | 6 (43%) | ||
| Preceding event | yes | 165 (80%) | 6 (75%) | 6 (43%) | 0.11 |
| no | 42 (20%) | 2 (25%) | 8 (57%) | ||
| Type of preceding event | 80 (49%) strain | 2 (25%) strain | 2 (33%) illness |
| |
| 59 (36%) trauma | 1 (13%) surgery | 2 (33%) strain | |||
| 16 (10%) stress | 3 (62%) missing | 1 (17%) childbirth | |||
| 10 (5%) other | 1 (17%) surgery |
Points that help making the correct diagnosis of neuralgic amyotrophy.
|
|
| • Any patient with acute onset of very severe (NRS ≥ 7/10), analgesic resistent shoulder and/or upper arm pain |
| • Pain often worse at night and also severe when arm is at rest |
| • Multifocal peripheral nervous system symptoms and signs that can be bilateral but asymmetric |
|
|
| • Inspect and palpate shoulder with upper body and arms bared for scapular asymmetry and muscle atrophy |
| • Look for scapular dyskinesia from dorsal viewpoint with one slow shoulder abduction—anteflexion and vice versa movement (Some video examples of this type of movement can be seen following the links on this Radboudumc website page: |
| • Test and compare bilateral strength of serratus anterior, shoulder exorotation, long thumb and index finger flexors and forearm pronation: any weakness found in a combination of these is suspect for NA and rare in other disorders with similar presentations |