AI Article Synopsis

  • Arthroscopy is increasingly popular for its minimally-invasive approach, but it can lead to nerve injuries that have significant economic, psychological, and legal consequences for both patients and surgeons.
  • A review of medical literature identified that nerve injuries during arthroscopic procedures often occur due to direct damage when creating portals or during surgical maneuvers, as well as from indirect factors like pressure or poor patient positioning.
  • To minimize these risks, strict adherence to surgical techniques and patient positioning guidelines is essential, and if nerve injury occurs, a waiting period of 6 months before considering surgical revision is recommended, along with regular physiotherapy and assessments.

Article Abstract

Arthroscopy is more and more popular. Although minimally-invasive, it's not completely free of complications as nerves lesions which can be invalidating for the patient and frustrating for the surgeon with significant economic, psychological and medico-legal implications. The purpose was to review the literature about nerve injuries related to arthroscopy. A scientific literature review was performed in PubMed/Medline, including articles dealing with cases of iatrogen lesions of the peripheral nerves occurred during arthroscopic procedures. These lesions are mainly due to direct damage by nerve section while cutting for making the portals or during surgical maneuvers, or indirect damage due to traction or pressure mechanisms especially for errors in patient positioning. Also the tourniquet can lead to compression and ischemic nerve injury. Arthroscopy can cause both transient and permanent neurological lesions manifested with dysesthesia up to paralysis according to Seddon's classification in neuroapraxia, axonotmesis and neurotmesis. Incidence of complications in general and of nerve injuries during arthroscopy are reported by joint. A rigorous respect for surgical technique and all perioperative precautions, particularly in relation to the positioning of the patient, greatly reduce the risk of nerve injury. The suggested waiting time before surgical nerve revision is 6 months. In the meanwhile the patient should perform physiotherapy constantly and improvements should be evaluated with clinical examination and electromyography 15-20 days after the lesion, and thereafter at 3 and 6 months.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8567779PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.52965/001c.24441DOI Listing

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