Mechanomyography as a Surgical Adjunct for Treatment of Chronic Entrapment Neuropathy: A Case Series

Oper Neurosurg (Hagerstown). 2023 Sep 1;25(3):242-250. doi: 10.1227/ons.0000000000000812. Epub 2023 Jul 13.

Abstract

Background: Chronic entrapment neuropathy results in a clinical syndrome ranging from mild pain to debilitating atrophy. There remains a lack of objective metrics that quantify nerve dysfunction and guide surgical decision-making. Mechanomyography (MMG) reflects mechanical motor activity after stimulation of neuromuscular tissue and may indicate underlying nerve dysfunction.

Objective: To evaluate the role of MMG as a surgical adjunct in treating chronic entrapment neuropathies.

Methods: Patients 18 years or older with cubital tunnel syndrome (n = 8) and common peroneal neuropathy (n = 15) were enrolled. Surgical decompression of entrapped nerves was performed with intraoperative MMG of the hypothenar and tibialis anterior muscles. MMG stimulus thresholds (MMG-st) were correlated with compound muscle action potential (CMAP), motor nerve conduction velocity, baseline functional status, and clinical outcomes.

Results: After nerve decompression, MMG-st significantly reduced, the mean reduction of 0.5 mA (95% CI: 0.3-0.7, P < .001). On bivariate analysis, MMG-st exhibited significant negative correlation with common peroneal nerve CMAP ( P < .05), but no association with ulnar nerve CMAP and motor nerve conduction velocity. On preoperative electrodiagnosis, 60% of nerves had axonal loss and 40% had conduction block. The MMG-st was higher in the nerves with axonal loss as compared with the nerves with conduction block. MMG-st was negatively correlated with preoperative hand strength (grip/pinch) and foot-dorsiflexion/toe-extension strength ( P < .05). At the final visit, MMG-st significantly correlated with pain, PROMIS-10 physical function, and Oswestry Disability Index ( P < .05).

Conclusion: MMG-st may serve as a surgical adjunct indicating axonal integrity in chronic entrapment neuropathies which may aid in clinical decision-making and prognostication of functional outcomes.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Cubital Tunnel Syndrome* / diagnosis
  • Cubital Tunnel Syndrome* / surgery
  • Humans
  • Muscle, Skeletal
  • Neural Conduction* / physiology
  • Pain
  • Ulnar Nerve / surgery