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Analysis of segmental motor conduction in the median and the ulnar nerves: comparison between normal and diabetic individuals]
Authors:N Wada  O Hasegawa  N Kirigaya  E Mimura  M Iino
Institution:Division of Clinical Laboratory, Yokohama City University Hospital, Japan.
Abstract:We investigated characteristics of segmental motor conduction in the median and the ulnar nerves. Subjects were 55 individuals with normal conduction of the upper extremity and 71 patients with diabetes mellitus. Mean polyneuropathy index (PNI), which was determined as a mean percentage of the normal for 6 indices concerning to the conduction velocity in the upper limb, was 99.0% in the normal group and 85.6 % in the diabetic group on the mean. In the normal group distal latency was longer in the median nerve than in the ulnar nerve, and the conduction time between Erb's point and the wrist was longer in the ulnar nerve than the median nerve both in men and women. In the diabetic group these differences were accentuated; that means the distal latency was relatively more prolonged in the median nerve and the conduction time between Erb's point and the wrist was much longer in the ulnar nerve. Prolonged distal latency in the median nerve of women and conduction delay between Erb's point and the wrist in the ulnar nerve of men altogether resulted in the gender difference in the median minus ulnar F-wave latency after wrist stimulation in the diabetic group. Carpal tunnel segment of the median nerve and the elbow segment of the ulnar nerve are known to be common entrapment sites. This phenomenon of accentuated conduction delay in these common entrapment sites might be considered as a sort of 'double crush syndrome'.
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