The Tinel sign has no diagnostic value for nerve entrapment or neuropathy in the legs.

Muscle Nerve

Department of Neurology and Clinical Neurophysiology, Leiden University Medical Centre, Postbus, 9600, 2300 RC Leiden, The Netherlands.

Published: June 2016

Introduction: The presence of a Tinel sign in leg nerves has been proposed as a criterion for decompressive surgery in polyneuropathy. We investigated the diagnostic yield of the Tinel sign for nerve entrapment and for distal symmetrical peripheral neuropathy (DSPN).

Methods: We prospectively tested for the Tinel sign at 3 sites of possible nerve entrapment per leg in 91 patients. Entrapment was defined using nerve conduction data. We also investigated whether the number of sites at which the Tinel sign was present identified patients with DSPN.

Results: Sensitivity of the Tinel sign for nerve entrapment was low (29%, 44%, and 17%) for the 3 sites, and specificity was moderate (86%, 75%, and 81%). In the subgroup with DSPN, sensitivity was extremely low (0%, 20%, and 8%), and specificity was moderate (91%, 79%, and 73%). The number of sites with a Tinel sign did not identify patients with DSPN.

Conclusion: The Tinel sign does not reliably indicate nerve entrapment or DSPN. Muscle Nerve 54: 25-30, 2016.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mus.25000DOI Listing

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