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The Musculocutaneous Nerve in a High Resolution MRI

D

Diakonhjemmet Hospital

Status

Completed

Conditions

Brachial Plexus Block

Treatments

Other: MCN scoring

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02305875
S-04115B

Details and patient eligibility

About

The investigators have made a favourable experience with the in 2006 published transarterial triple injection method [4]. This classic method combines the block effect of an axillary catheter injection (median nerve position) with a double transarterial injection at terminal nerve level in the axilla.

The investigators experience after a recent published MRI study [3], confirms that a proximal axillary local anesthetic injection via an axillary catheter, guided by nerve stimulator, is beneficial for the block effect. The MRI study was conducted using nerve stimulation and a transarterial technique. The proximal injection with an effect at cord level, combined with axillary injections at terminal nerve level, produce an effective block distal to the elbow.

The proximal injection has obviously an effect to the lateral cord and the musculocutaneous nerve (mcn) [3]. Recent studies have advocated that a double axillary injection method is sufficient for the axillary block [5, 6]. Their block techniques included a selective block of the mcn at terminal nerve level. The investigators MRI study [3] demonstrated a successful block effect (analgesia or anaesthesia) of the mcn nerve in all patients (15 of 15 patients) in the triple injection group without a selective block of this nerve. In the 1- deposit (catheter injection) and 2-deposit (transarterial injections) group, 11 of 15 patients (73%) had the mcn successful blocked.

The objective in this study (Article 4) is to examine the mean position of the mcn nerve and its relationship to the coracobrachial muscle. Can MRI indicate / predict that a proximal directed axillary catheter in median nerve position is beneficial in order to provide a successful mcn blockade? Is a selective injection to the mcn at terminal nerve level superfluous when a catheter is used?

Full description

45 patients were examined with MRI in a previous study [3] and now they underwent an additionally examination with a special focus on the anatomy and course of the mcn nerve. A line was drawn from the most cranial part of the humeral head perpendicular towards the brachial plexus. The distance from this line to the point where the mcn nerve entered the coracobrachial muscle was measured. This entering point was defined as the point where the mcn nerve left the axillary sheat. The visulaity of the mcn was scored as 0 = not visible, 1 = partly visible and 2 = clear visible.

The evaluation was a consensus assessment where all authors evaluated the T2-weighted, fat suppressed MRI images at the same time. If the mcn nerve could not be identified, the patients were excluded.

Enrollment

54 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 75 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients scheduled for hand surgery
  • ASA 1 - 2
  • Weight from 50 - 95 kg
  • MR compatible, suitable

Exclusion criteria

  • Neurologic deficit
  • Reaction to LA

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

54 participants in 1 patient group

MCN scoring
Experimental group
Description:
Scoring of the mcn nerve's position in the axillary sheat using MRI
Treatment:
Other: MCN scoring

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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