Diagnosis of the hypothenar hammer syndrome by high-resolution contrast-enhanced MR angiography

Our objective was to describe the imaging features of hypothenar hammer syndrome using minimally invasive contrast-enhanced MR angiography in comparison with oscillography study. In five patients with hypothenar hammer syndrome Gd-BOPTA-enhanced elliptically reordered 3D pulse sequence MR was compar...

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Veröffentlicht in:European radiology 2002-10, Vol.12 (10), p.2457-2462
Hauptverfasser: Winterer, J T, Ghanem, N, Roth, M, Schaefer, O, Lehnhardt, S, Thürl, C, Horch, R E, Laubenberger, J
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container_end_page 2462
container_issue 10
container_start_page 2457
container_title European radiology
container_volume 12
creator Winterer, J T
Ghanem, N
Roth, M
Schaefer, O
Lehnhardt, S
Thürl, C
Horch, R E
Laubenberger, J
description Our objective was to describe the imaging features of hypothenar hammer syndrome using minimally invasive contrast-enhanced MR angiography in comparison with oscillography study. In five patients with hypothenar hammer syndrome Gd-BOPTA-enhanced elliptically reordered 3D pulse sequence MR was compared with oscillography findings and clinical symptoms focusing on angiographic appearance of vessel injury, distribution pattern of hand vasculature and joining branches between the radial and ulnar artery supply. All patients showed segmental occlusion at the site of trauma impact with varying involvement of the superficial palmar arch, common volar digital arteries. Embolic disease was present in 50% of patients and could be clearly identified with MRA. Good correspondence was found between angiographic appearance including the presence of collaterals, clinical symptoms and oscillography. Bilateral comparison was helpful in distinguishing between vessel variants and pathology. Bilateral Gd-BOPTA-enhanced MR angiography is a minimally invasive method to depict clearly the localization and extent of vessel injury in hypothenar hammer syndrome providing valuable information about distribution pattern of hand vasculature and presence of collaterals; however, no flow data can be obtained.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s00330-002-1324-3
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subjects Adult
Aneurysms
Arterial Occlusive Diseases - diagnosis
Catheters
Contrast Media
Fingers - blood supply
Hand - blood supply
Humans
Ischemia
Magnetic Resonance Angiography - methods
Male
Medical imaging
Meglumine - analogs & derivatives
Middle Aged
Occupational Diseases - diagnosis
Organometallic Compounds
Patients
Syndrome
Trauma
Ulnar Artery - injuries
Veins & arteries
title Diagnosis of the hypothenar hammer syndrome by high-resolution contrast-enhanced MR angiography
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