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Intraneural vascularity of the median, ulnar and common peroneal nerve: Microvascular ultrasound and pathophysiological implications

Johannes Deeg, Felix Mündel, Alexander Loizides, Leonhard Gruber, Hannes Gruber

2023Australasian Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Objectives: Changes in the microvascular environment are considered crucial in the pathogenesis of compression neuropathies. Several studies have demonstrated elevated intraneural vascularity in severe neuropathy compared with healthy subjects, where intraneural vascularity is considered predominantly undetectable. The aim of this study was to assess and quantify intraneural vasculature by superb microvascular imaging (SMI) in healthy volunteers in the median, ulnar and common peroneal nerve. Methods: Intraneural vascularity was quantified in 26 healthy volunteers (312 segments overall) by SMI sonography using a 22-MHz linear transducer. Individual nerve segment vascularity was compared with the mean vascularity using one-way ANOVA and Kruskal-Wallis tests, respectively. Vendor-provided quantification and manual vessel count were compared by linear regression analysis. Results: , P < 0.0001). Vendor-provided automated quantification severely overestimated vascular content compared with manual quantification. Conclusion: Superb microvascular imaging can facilitate the visualisation of nerve vascularity and even detect local variations in vessel density. The pathophysiological implications for peripheral neuropathies, especially compression neuropathies, warrant further investigation, but the absence of visible intraneural vasculature as a negative finding in the diagnostic of compression neuropathies should be interpreted with caution, as the intraneural vascularity may lie beyond the 18 MHz resolution power of a transducer.

Topics & Concepts

VascularityMedicineMedian nerveUltrasoundRadiologyAnatomyPathologyPeripheral Nerve DisordersTendon Structure and TreatmentPain Mechanisms and Treatments
Intraneural vascularity of the median, ulnar and common peroneal nerve: Microvascular ultrasound and pathophysiological implications | Litcius