SEARCH

SEARCH BY CITATION

Keywords:

  • conduction block;
  • nerve injury;
  • neurapraxia;
  • ulnar mononeuropathy

Abstract

Acute conduction block injuries often result from nerve compression or trauma. The temporal pattern of clinical, electrophysiologic, and histopathologic changes following these injuries has been extensively studied in experimental animal models but not in humans. Our recent evaluation of a young man with an injury to the deep motor branch of the ulnar nerve following nerve compression from weightlifting exercises provided the opportunity to follow the course and recovery of a severe conduction block injury with sequential nerve conduction studies. The conduction block slowly and completely resolved, as did the clinical deficit, over a 14-week period. The reduction in conduction block occurred at a linear rate of −6.1% per week. © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Muscle Nerve 26: 145–149, 2002