Nerve Compression Syndromes
Mostrando 1-5 de 5 artigos, teses e dissertações.
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1. Interventional analgesic block in a dog with cauda equina syndrome. Case report
RESUMO JUSTIFICATIVA E OBJETIVOS: A síndrome da cauda equina é uma afecção neurológica prevalente em cães cujos sinais neurológicos são causados pela compressão de raízes nervosas localizadas no canal espinhal lombossacral sendo frequentemente associada à dor, claudicação, paresia ou paralisia de membros pélvicos e alterações do funcionament
BrJP. Publicado em: 19/06/2019
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2. Estudo experimental do hematoma intraneural associado à compressão extrínseca: análise funcional e histomorfométrica / Experimental intraneural hematoma with extrinsic compression: functional assessment and neural histomorphometry
INTRODUCTION: Intraneural hematoma can result in the median nerve in the carpal tunnel after trauma or coagulation disorders. The decision for expectant management or descompressive surgical techniques is still controversial. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Fifty male Wistar rats were divided into 5 groups. The sciatic nerve was wrapped around with a silastic device i
Publicado em: 2007
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3. Palmaris brevis spasm syndrome.
Palmaris brevis spasm syndrome is a rare and benign condition of localised muscular hyperactivity. In five men, the hypothenar eminence underwent spontaneous, irregular, tonic contractions of the palmaris brevis muscle. An EMG showed spontaneous high frequency discharges of normal motor units, without evidence of neuropathy or of nerve compression. This synd
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4. Upper limb involvement in cervical spondylosis.
Analysis of 200 cases reveals that the two neurological syndromes, brachial neuritis and myelopathy, associated with cervical spondylosis are distinct with relatively little overlap. While upper limb motor and sensory loss are doubtless due to nerve root compression in cases of "pure' brachial neuritis, they are more likely to be due to cord damage in cases
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5. Case Reports: Unusual Cause of Shoulder Pain in a Collegiate Baseball Player
The objective of reporting this case was to introduce a unique cause of shoulder pain in a high-level Division I NCAA collegiate baseball player. Various neurovascular causes of shoulder pain have been described in the overhead athlete, including quadrilateral space syndrome, thoracic outlet syndrome, effort thrombosis, and suprascapular nerve entrapment. Al
Springer-Verlag.