Kimura J
Brain. 1979 Sep;102(3):619-35. doi: 10.1093/brain/102.3.619.
Palmar stimulation was used to assess median nerve conduction across the carpal tunnel in 61 control patients and 105 patients with the carpal tunnel syndrome. With serial stimulation from midpalm to distal forearm the sensory axons normally showed a predictable latency change of 0.16 to 0.21 ms/cm as the stimulus site was moved proximally in 1 cm increments. In 47 (52 per cent) of 91 affected nerves tested serially, there was a sharply localized latency increase across a 1 cm segment, most commonly 2 to 4 cm distally to the origin of the transverse carpal ligament. In these hands, the focal latency change across the affected 1 cm segment (mean +/- SD: 0.80 +/- 0.22 ms/cm) averaged more than four times that of the adjoining distal (0.19 +/- 0.09 ms/cm) or proximal 1 cm segments (0.19 +/- 0.08 ms/cm). In the remaining 44 (48 per cent) hands, the latency increase was distributed more evenly across the carpal tunnel. Unlike the sensory axons the motor axons were difficult to test serially because of the recurrent course of the thenar nerve, which may be contained in a separate tunnel. The wrist-to-palm latency was significantly greater in the patients with carpal tunnel syndromes than in the controls for sensory (2.18 +/- 0.48 ms v 1.41 +/- 0.18 ms) and motor axons (2.79 +/- 0.93 ms v 1.50 +/- 0.21 ms). Consequently, there was considerable difference between the carpal tunnel syndromes and controls in SNCV (38.5 +/- 7.5 m/s v 57.3 +/- 6.9 m/s), and MNCV (28.2 +/- 4.5 m/s v 49.0 +/- 5.7 m/s). In the remaining distal segment, however, there was only a small difference between the two groups in sensory (1.48 +/- 0.28 ms v 1.41 +/- 0.22 ms) and motor latency (2.15 +/- 0.34 ms v 2.10 +/- 0.31 ms). The exclusion of the relatively normal distal latency made it possible to demonstrate mild slowing across the carpal tunnel in 36 (21 per cent) sensory and 40 (23 per cent) motor axons of 172 affected nerves when the conventional terminal latencies were normal. Sensory or motor conduction abnormalities were found in all but 13 (8 per cent) hands. Without palmar stimulation, however, an additional 32 (19 per cent) hands would have been regarded as normal.
对61名对照患者和105名患有腕管综合征的患者采用掌部刺激来评估正中神经在腕管内的传导情况。随着从中掌部到前臂远端的连续刺激,当刺激部位以1厘米的增量向近端移动时,感觉轴突通常显示出可预测的潜伏期变化,为0.16至0.21毫秒/厘米。在91条接受连续测试的受影响神经中,有47条(52%)在横跨1厘米节段处出现潜伏期急剧局部增加,最常见于腕横韧带起始处向远端2至4厘米处。在这些手部中,受影响的1厘米节段的局灶性潜伏期变化(平均值±标准差:0.80±0.22毫秒/厘米)平均是相邻远端(0.19±0.09毫秒/厘米)或近端1厘米节段(0.19±0.08毫秒/厘米)的四倍多。在其余44只(48%)手部中,潜伏期增加在腕管内分布更为均匀。与感觉轴突不同,由于鱼际神经的折返行程,运动轴突难以进行连续测试,鱼际神经可能包含在一个单独的通道中。腕管综合征患者的腕部至掌部潜伏期在感觉(2.18±0.48毫秒对1.41±0.18毫秒)和运动轴突(2.79±0.93毫秒对1.50±0.21毫秒)方面显著长于对照组。因此,腕管综合征患者与对照组在感觉神经传导速度(SNCV)(38.5±7.5米/秒对57.3±6.9米/秒)和运动神经传导速度(MNCV)(28.2±4.5米/秒对49.0±5.7米/秒)方面存在相当大的差异。然而,在其余的远端节段,两组在感觉(1.48±0.28毫秒对1.41±0.22毫秒)和运动潜伏期(2.15±0.34毫秒对2.10±0.31毫秒)方面仅有微小差异。排除相对正常的远端潜伏期后,当传统的终末潜伏期正常时,在172条受影响神经的36条(21%)感觉轴突和40条(23%)运动轴突中能够显示出腕管内的轻度减慢。除13只(8%)手部外,其余所有手部均发现感觉或运动传导异常。然而,如果不进行掌部刺激,另外32只(19%)手部会被视为正常。