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Neural Hydrodissection of Common Peroneal Nerve in Collegiate … · 2020. 5. 13. · Peroneal...

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Neural Hydrodissection of Common Peroneal Nerve in Collegiate and Professional Dancers Steven J. Karageanes, DO, FAOASM Medical Director, MercyElite Sports Medicine
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  • Neural Hydrodissection of Common Peroneal Nerve in Collegiate and

    Professional DancersSteven J. Karageanes, DO, FAOASM

    Medical Director, MercyElite Sports Medicine

  • No Financial Disclosures

  • Nerve Entrapment

    •Altered transmission because of mechanical irritation from impingement of an anatomical neighbor

    •Pressure-induced segmental injury to a peripheral nerve

    due to anatomical structure or pathologic process

  • Entrapment Effects• Pain

    • Numbness

    • Tingling

    • Weakness • Fatiguable • Leads to injury

  • Entrapment Mechanics• Compression

    • Constriction

    • Overstretching

    • Edema

  • Nerve Entrapments• In tunnels: carpal tunnel or tarsal tunnel syndrome

    • Between muscles: axillary nerve

    • Around blood vessels: occipital nerve

    • Across joints: superficial peroneal nerve

    • Between bones: Morton’s neuroma

    • External compression: boot/cast

    • Fascial penetration sites: anterior cutaneous nerve

  • Common Peroneal Nerve• Weak foot extension, winging

    • Lateral ankle pain/peroneus tendinitis

    • Poor balance (pointe)

    • Impingement pain back of ankle

    • Limited relevè

    • “That’s My Bad Leg”

  • Fascia

    •Nerves travel through fascia on pathway to muscular innervation

    •Repetitive compression or stretch -> neuroinflammatory response

    -> fascial adhesions/constrictions

  • Neural Hydrodissection

    • Using solution to free up fascia/scar tissue compressing nerve

  • Hydrodissection Research• Wu 2019/Evers 2018 et al: carpal tunnel/median nerve (TOPS)

    • Delzell 2020: Median nerve at pronator tunnel

    • Stoddard 2019: Ulnar nerve

    • Watanabe 2020: Saphenous nerve

    • Burke 2019: Sciatic nerve

    • Mulvaney 2011: Lateral femoral cutaneous nerve

  • • Long thoracic

    • Dorsal Scapular

    • Supraclavicular

    • Posterior interosseous

    • Brachial plexus

    • Cervical plexus

    • C5-C7 nerve roots

    • Greater occipital

    Hydrodissected Nerves• Baxter’s Nerve

    • Ilioinguinal

    • Iliohypogastric

    • Obturator

    • Genitofemoral

    • Axillary

    • Geniculate

    • Dorsal digital

    T H OM AS B . C LARK & S T ANLE Y K . H . L AM

    www.mskus.com

  • Dancer

    • 66-91% of all injuries are in lower extremities

    Incidence and Prevalence of Musculoskeletal Injury in Ballet. A Systematic Review Preston J. Smith, MD,* Brayden J. Gerrie, BS,* Kevin E. Varner, MD,* Patrick C. McCulloch, MD,* David M. Lintner, MD,* and Joshua D. Harris, MD*†Orthop J Sports Med. 2015 Jul; 3(7): 2325967115592621. Published online 2015 Jul 6. doi: 10.1177/2325967115592621

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Smith%20PJ%5BAuthor%5D&cauthor=true&cauthor_uid=26673541https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Gerrie%20BJ%5BAuthor%5D&cauthor=true&cauthor_uid=26673541https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Varner%20KE%5BAuthor%5D&cauthor=true&cauthor_uid=26673541https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=McCulloch%20PC%5BAuthor%5D&cauthor=true&cauthor_uid=26673541https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Lintner%20DM%5BAuthor%5D&cauthor=true&cauthor_uid=26673541https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Lintner%20DM%5BAuthor%5D&cauthor=true&cauthor_uid=26673541https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Harris%20JD%5BAuthor%5D&cauthor=true&cauthor_uid=26673541https://dx.doi.org/10.1177%2F2325967115592621

  • Dancer• Peripheral nerves are prone to compression

    Kennedy JG1, Baxter DE.Clin Sports Med. Nerve disorders in dancers 2008 Apr;27(2):329-34. doi: 10.1016/j.csm.2008.01.001.

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Kennedy%20JG%5BAuthor%5D&cauthor=true&cauthor_uid=18346547https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Baxter%20DE%5BAuthor%5D&cauthor=true&cauthor_uid=18346547

  • Dancer• Pain tolerance much higher

    • Pressure to push through smaller disabilities

    Kennedy JG1, Baxter DE.Clin Sports Med. Nerve disorders in dancers 2008 Apr;27(2):329-34. doi: 10.1016/j.csm.2008.01.001.

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Kennedy%20JG%5BAuthor%5D&cauthor=true&cauthor_uid=18346547https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Baxter%20DE%5BAuthor%5D&cauthor=true&cauthor_uid=18346547

  • Questions

    • Can hydrodissecting the common peroneal nerve IMMEDIATELY and LONG TERM improve muscle strength in dancers?

    • Will dancers feel improvement in strength? Ability to rehearse? Perform?

    • Is the procedure well tolerated?

  • Subjects• Dancers: 20

    • Total number of knees: 22

    • Number of right knees: 11

    • Number of left knees: 11

    • Professional/college faculty: 9

    • College: 13

  • Criteria• Subjective: Complaint in

    ipsilateral lower extremity

    • Recurrent ankle sprains

    • Peroneal muscle/tendon pain

    • Ankle impingement

    • Lower leg pain

    • Hip/glute pain

    • Lateral knee pain

    • Difficulty with techniques

    • Turns

    • Relevè

    • Pointe

    • Leaps

  • Criteria• Objective strength

    • Ankle dorsiflexion/eversion: +3 or +4/5 (muscle breaks)

    • Ankle plantar flexion/inversion: +5/5

    • Fatiguability: 4 rep muscle test

    • Ipsilateral side weakens

    • Contralateral side does not change

  • Criteria• Physical exam

    • No acute injury in LE

    • No other muscle weakness in LE

    • Tenderness along common perineal nerve at fibular head or distal biceps femoris tendon

    • No sensory deficits

  • Questionnaire• Sent no earlier than 2 months after

    procedure

    • 4 questions

    • Strength

    • Rehearsal

    • Performance

    • Pain

  • • 0 = No effect

    • 1 = A tiny bit

    • 2 = I could tell

    • 3 = Yeah, definitely different

    • 4 = Whoa, things are easier

    • 5 = Wow, this is amazing!

    Strength-Rehearse-Perform

  • • 0 = No effect

    • 1 = A tiny bit

    • 2 = Uncomfortable

    • 3 = Ouch!

    • 4 = Hey, watch it!

    • 5 = Oh God, this is horrible!

    Pain from Procedure

  • • Ultrasound guidance performed by sports medicine board certified physician with 14 years experience

    • Logiq S7 US machine using 5-12 mhz linear Matrix probe

    Ultrasound

  • • Patient lies on contralateral side, leg on a bolster support

    • Operator sits behind patient facing posterior knee

    • Ultrasound machine on opposite side of table

    • Operator can inject in direction towards the screen

    Procedure

  • • Injectate: 5% dextrose/saline solution

    • 27-gauge 1.5 inch needle on a 30 cc syringe

    • 2 cc dextrose 50%

    • 16 cc saline 0.9%

    • 1 cc triamcinolone 40mg

    • 1 cc lidocaine 1%

    Procedure

  • Common Peroneal Nerve

  • Common Peroneal Nerve

  • Common Peroneal Nerve

  • Results

  • Strength• 22 dancers tested: +3/5 or +4/5 strength (operator could break muscle)

    • AFTER 1 MINUTE: 22/22 tested +5/5 (operator could not break muscle)

    • AFTER 1 MONTH: 20/20 tested +5/5

    • AFTER 3 MONTHS: 13/14 tested +5/5

    • In the one case, CPN hydrodissected at distal biceps femoris

    • AFTER 6 MONTHS: 8/8 tested +5/5

  • Drop Foot

    • Three non-dancers with DROP FOOT (0/5 or 1/5 eversion, dorsiflexion)

    • ZERO out of THREE had any improvement

    • Two were from L5 and post-operative

    • One had excessive scarring around CPN, had surgery to release nerve

  • QUALITATITVE Dancer Questionnaires

  • • 0 = No effect

    • 1 = A tiny bit

    • 2 = I could tell

    • 3 = Yeah, definitely different

    • 4 = Whoa, things are easier

    • 5 = Wow, this is amazing!

    Strength-Rehearse-Perform

  • College

    0

    1

    2

    3

    4

    5

    Strength Rehearsal Performance Total

    3.973.8744.08

  • • 0 = No effect

    • 1 = A tiny bit

    • 2 = Uncomfortable

    • 3 = Ouch!

    • 4 = Hey, watch it!

    • 5 = Oh God, this is horrible!

    Pain from Procedure

  • College

    0

    1

    2

    3

    4

    5

    Pain

    1.54

  • Data Ranges• No responses below 3 for strength and rehearsal

    • Only one response below 3 for performance (2)

    • Only two responses above 2 for pain (3)

    • 45% (10/22): at least one response of 5

    • 27% (6/22): at least two responses of 5

  • Why in Dancers?

    • Stretching

    • Australian Ballet PTs: STOP static calf stretches

    • Compression: kneeling on floor

    • Weakness: weaker gastrocnemius causes increase in soleus recruitment

  • Strengths• All dancers highly trained/elite

    • Accepted into college dance program

    • Current professional dancer

    • Current university dance faculty

    • One operator performing all tests

    • Multiple inclusion criteria for assessing nerve entrapment

  • Strengths• Mixed method study

    • Quantitative

    • Qualitative

    • Functional and practical assessments

    • Assessing tolerance of procedure

  • Weaknesses• Outcome study

    • No control group

    • No blinding

    • Not truly quantitative

    • No true measurement of muscle strength

    • No EMG measurements

  • Weaknesses• Did not take ultrasound measurements

    • Did not use hydroxychloroquine, azithromycin and zinc*

    * Facebook Medical University

  • BANE SEZ:

    STAY SAFE!


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