Official scientific distribution organ of Instituto Panvascular de Occidente
Trapezius muscle palsy due to spinal nerve injury: Five cases report.
PDF Casos Clínicos (Spanish)
XML Casos Clínicos (Spanish)

Keywords

Lesión de nervio espinal
Parálisis de trapecio
Neurólisis
Injerto
Neurotización
Transposición muscular

How to Cite

1.
Trapezius muscle palsy due to spinal nerve injury: Five cases report. Rev Med Clin [Internet]. 2019 Sep. 30 [cited 2024 May 17];3(3):168-77. Available from: https://medicinaclinica.org/index.php/rmc/article/view/157

Abstract

Summary

Background:  Spinal nerve injury causes paralysis of the trapezius muscle, Its trajectory is superficial in the posterior triangle of the neck presenting susceptibility to be injured by iatrogenia, in the dissection of said region, being the most frequent cause. Five cases report:  Four patients diagnosed with spinal nerve injury: Females aged 34, 42 and 48 years with a 4, 2 and 3 -year evolution respectively, after removal of the ganglion in supraclavical zone. A 27-year-old woman with a 1-year disease following emptying of cervical lymph nodes by thyroid cancer; A 28-year-old man with an evolution of 18 months after receiving direct trauma  in the right supraclavicular region. In all cases presenting pain in shoulder, diagnosis was confirmed with EMG; by time of evolution transposition surgery is proposed for correction and improvement of function. Conclusion: If the immediate lesion is detected, the nerve reconstruction should be performed; if it does not improve in 6 months, neurolysis should be attempted; the procedure of Eden and Lange or the transposition of the sternum head from the pectoral to the scapula, as it corrects the deformity and improves the functionality.

Keywords: spinal nerve injury; trapezius paralysis; neurolysis; nerve graftin; neurotization, muscle transposition.

PDF Casos Clínicos (Spanish)
XML Casos Clínicos (Spanish)
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Copyright (c) 2019 Clinical Medicine Journal

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.