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Neurosurgery:
February 2002 - Volume 50 - Issue 2 - pp 412-414
Case Reports

Postoperative Edema after Vascular Access Causing Nerve Compression Secondary to the Presence of a Perineuronal Lipoma: Case Report

Goldstein, Lawrence J. M.D.; Helfend, Lisa K. Ph.D., M.D.; Kordestani, Rouzbeh K. M.D., M.P.H.

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Abstract

OBJECTIVE AND IMPORTANCE : Median nerve neuropathy can be clinically devastating to a patient. It can be caused by compression of the median nerve anywhere along its course. We present the case of delayed median nerve neuropathy after the placement of a vascular graft in the arm.

CLINICAL PRESENTATION : An arm shunt was placed in the nondominant upper extremity in a 60-year-old man with end-stage renal disease. Twelve hours postoperatively, the patient developed neurapraxia in the median nerve distribution in the hand.

INTERVENTION : Exploration of the arm revealed a lipoma coursing along and deep to the median nerve. Resection of the lipoma decompressed the nerve.

CONCLUSION : In this patient, median nerve neuropathy was caused by a lipoma and postoperative swelling from placement of the vascular graft. The swelling that occurred after the shunt placement unmasked subclinical compression of the nerve by a lipoma deep to the median nerve. To our knowledge, this report is unique in documenting damage to the median nerve after vascular graft placement as a result of an occult mass.

Copyright © by the Congress of Neurological Surgeons

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