Bone and Soft-Tissue Disorders
= entrapment syndrome caused by chronic pressure on the median nerve within the carpal tunnel
Etiology:
- intrinsic: flexor tendon tendinitis or tenosynovitis, infiltrative disorder, mass, cyst, muscle hypertrophy (from repetitive wrist / finger flexion), anomalous origin of lumbrical muscles
- extrinsic: mass, carpal instability, Kienböck disease
Pathogenesis: probably ischemia with venous congestion (stage 1), nerve edema from anoxic damage to capillary endothelium (stage 2), impairment of venous and arterial blood supply (stage 3)
- nocturnal hand discomfort
- weakness, clumsiness, finger paresthesias
MR:
- pseudoneuroma of median nerve = swelling of median nerve proximal to carpal tunnel
- swelling of nerve within carpal tunnel
- increased signal intensity of nerve on T2WI
- volar bowing of flexor retinaculum
- swelling of tendon sheath ← tenosynovitis
- mass(es) within carpal tunnel
- marked enhancement ← nerve edema ← breakdown of blood-nerve barrier
- no enhancement (= ischemia) provoked by wrist held in an extended / flexed position