AI Article Synopsis

  • A 58-year-old woman presented with a wrist mass that caused tingling in her fingers; imaging confirmed it was adjacent to the radial artery.
  • Surgical exploration revealed distortion of the superficial radial nerve and complications involving the radial artery, leading to ganglion and part of the artery being resected and reconstructed with a vein graft.
  • At a 34-month follow-up, the patient had no symptoms and the radial artery remained healthy, indicating that careful diagnosis and possible artery reconstruction are important in similar cases.

Article Abstract

Rationale: There have been no reports of volar wrist ganglions being associated with atherosclerosis of the radial artery. Good results were obtained with radial artery reconstruction through ganglion excision and autogenous vein grafting. Hence, we report a previously unreported case, along with a review of the literature.

Patient Concerns: A 58-year-old female presented with the chief complaint of a mass on the volo-radial side of her right wrist. The patient complained of a tingling sensation in the thumb, index, and extensor zones that worsened when pressing the mass.

Diagnoses: Sonography revealed a well-defined, anechoic cystic lesion adjacent to the radial artery.

Interventions: Exploration was performed using a zig-zag incision on the mass. The superficial radial nerve (SRN), which innervates the thumb, was distorted by the mass and the nerve dissected from the mass. However, the artery and ganglion cysts were not separated completely in a part where hardening of the artery wall progressed as a result of degenerative changes, showing multiple small, hard, and yellowish masses. We resected the radial artery (approximately 1.5 cm) along with the ganglion and sent it for histological examination. The radial artery was then reconstructed using an autogenous venous graft.

Outcomes: At the 34-month follow-up, the patient was asymptomatic. Radial artery patency was normal without recurrence of the ganglion cyst.

Lessons: In patients with risk factors for radial artery atherosclerosis, a more careful diagnosis is required for the surgical treatment of the volar wrist ganglion. In addition, if the ganglion and radial artery are not completely dissected, excision of the radial artery and subsequent reconstruction of the radial artery using an autogenous vein may be a good surgical strategy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10344474PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/MD.0000000000034351DOI Listing

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