Evaluation of persons with suspected lumbosacral and cervical radiculopathy: Electrodiagnostic assessment and implications for treatment and outcomes (Part I).
Timothy R DillinghamThiru M AnnaswamyChristopher T PlastarasPublished in: Muscle & nerve (2020)
Persons with back, neck, and limb symptoms constitute a major referral population to specialists in electrodiagnostic (EDX) medicine. The evaluation of these patients involves consideration of both the common and less common disorders. The EDX examination with needle electromyography (EMG) is the most important means of testing for radiculopathy. This test has modest sensitivity but high specificity and well complements imaging of the spine. Needle EMG in combination with nerve conduction testing is valuable in excluding entrapment neuropathies and polyneuropathy-conditions that frequently mimic radicular symptoms. In this first of a two-part review, the optimal EDX evaluation of persons with suspected radiculopathy is presented. In part two, the implications of EDX findings for diagnosis and clinical management of persons with radiculopathy are reviewed.
Keyphrases
- end stage renal disease
- ultrasound guided
- pulmonary embolism
- chronic kidney disease
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- high resolution
- prognostic factors
- high density
- sleep quality
- patient reported outcomes
- insulin resistance
- adipose tissue
- photodynamic therapy
- skeletal muscle
- combination therapy
- metabolic syndrome
- fluorescence imaging
- clinical evaluation