Optimizing the technique for eliciting antidromic sural and superficial fibular sensory nerve action potentials

Author:

Winkel Antony12,Cook Mark1,Roberts Leslie1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, St Vincent's Hospital Melbourne The University of Melbourne Melbourne Victoria Australia

2. Department of Neurosciences Sunshine Coast Hospital and Health Service Birtinya Queensland Australia

Abstract

AbstractIntroduction/AimsLower limb sensory nerve action potentials are an important component of nerve conduction studies. Most testing of the sural and superficial fibular nerves involves antidromic techniques above the ankle, which result in a falsely unobtainable response in 2%–6% of healthy people. Cadaver, surgical, and more recent ultrasound series suggest this may relate to the site of fascia penetration of the nerve, and it is hypothesized that a modified technique may be more likely to produce reliable responses and reduce false‐negative errors.MethodsThis article evaluates a variety of recording distances for both nerves in 100 healthy controls, including varying recording electrode positions and techniques, to provide the optimal electrodiagnostic information in healthy control subjects.ResultsShorter stimulation distances produce higher‐amplitude responses but become confounded by increasing stimulation artifact at very short distances, with the best balance found at around 10 cm. In both sural and superficial fibular nerves, amplitude increases by approximately 10%/cm compared with the standard 14 cm distance. The Daube superficial fibular technique produced a higher amplitude than the Izzo Intermediate technique (by 22.46%, p < .001). The calculated upper limit of normal for side‐to‐side variation in amplitude was around 50% in the sural nerve but over 70% in the superficial fibular nerve.DiscussionIt is proposed that the 10 cm recording distance for both nerves is optimal, with minimal false‐negatives and a higher amplitude elicited than with existing techniques.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Neurology (clinical),Physiology

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