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Randomized Controlled Trial
. 2025 Nov 1;156(5):677e-687e.
doi: 10.1097/PRS.0000000000011859. Epub 2024 Nov 6.

Clinical Features of Conduction Block in Ulnar Neuropathy at the Elbow: Surgery of the Ulnar Nerve Multicenter Clinical Trial

Collaborators, Affiliations
Randomized Controlled Trial

Clinical Features of Conduction Block in Ulnar Neuropathy at the Elbow: Surgery of the Ulnar Nerve Multicenter Clinical Trial

Kevin C Chung et al. Plast Reconstr Surg. .

Abstract

Background: In ulnar neuropathy at the elbow, weakness is classically a sign of severe disease. Weakness is associated with motor axonal loss as measured by decreased distal compound muscle action potential (CMAP) amplitude. Conduction block, a demyelinating phenomenon that recovers readily, can also cause weakness, creating ambiguity for the treating clinician.

Methods: This cross-sectional study evaluated baseline blinded data collected from 2020 through 2023 from the Surgery of the Ulnar Nerve randomized controlled trial comparing in situ decompression versus transposition procedures. Adult patients underwent electrodiagnostic testing and clinical motor and sensory testing, and completed the Michigan Hand Questionnaire and Carpal Tunnel Questionnaire.

Results: A total of 177 patients were categorized into 3 distinct groups based on normal distal CMAP amplitudes (77 patients), presence of conduction block with or without distal CMAP amplitude loss (37 patients), or pure axonal loss with distal CMAP amplitude loss in the absence of conduction block (63 patients). Compared with the normal group, patients with conduction block had significantly decreased pinch strength and worse function domain scores on the Michigan Hand Questionnaire and Carpal Tunnel Questionnaire, but shorter duration of disease. Patients with pure axonal loss had decreased pinch strength, worse 2-point discrimination, and worse overall, function, and aesthetics domain scores on the Michigan Hand Questionnaire. There was a significant interaction between the effects of conduction block and distal CMAP amplitude on pinch strength, indicating that higher degrees of conduction block resulted in more pronounced loss of pinch strength in patients with relatively preserved distal CMAP amplitude.

Conclusion: These findings support the paradigm that ulnar neuropathy at the elbow presenting with conduction block represents a distinct and intermediate pathophysiology, distinguished by quicker onset with less advanced neurologic deficits.

Clinical question/level of evidence: Risk, II.

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Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Electrophysiology of Ulnar Neuropathy at the Elbow (Each panel depicts the ulnar nerve (thick lines = axons; thin lines = myelin sheaths; bend = elbow) with three standard stimulation sites (gray arrows: wrist, below elbow, above elbow locations) that yield a recorded compound muscle action potential (CMAP). Panel A: With normal physiology or with mild focal demyelination, axons are present and conducting across all segments, resulting in normal CMAP amplitudes from all three stimulation sites. Panel B: In focal demyelination and partial conduction block, nerve stimulation at the above elbow site yields a low CMAP amplitude, due to failure of action potential conduction across the site of demyelination. Stimulation of the ulnar nerve distal to the lesion yields normal CMAP amplitudes, as axons conduct normally across these segments. Panel C: In ulnar neuropathy with substantial axonal loss, stimulation across all sites yields low CMAP amplitudes. Panel D: In a mixed picture with some axons lost and some axons blocked, stimulation distal to the lesion yields a low CMAP amplitude, reflecting axonal loss. The proportion of preserved axons with conduction block is reflected in the relative amplitude decay across the lesion (elbow).
Figure 2.
Figure 2.
CONSORT Diagram of participant recruitment (Abbreviations: ADM = abductor digiti minimi muscle; CTS = carpal tunnel syndrome; FDI = first dorsal interosseous muscle; UNE = ulnar neuropathy at the elbow.

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