Tourniquet Paralysis May Reflect Injury of Muscle Spindles: A Case Report

Authors

  • Juhani V. Partanen Department of Clinical Neurophysiology, University of Helsinki, Clinical Neurosciences, Clinical Neurophysiology, and University Hospital of Helsinki, Finland.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/idmmr/v9/1902A

Keywords:

Tourniquet paresis, ENMG, motor evoked potential, muscle spindle, Ia-afferent knee surgery

Abstract

Objective: Knee operation using pneumatic tourniquet may cause weakness of the quadriceps femoris muscle. A patient with a bilateral paresis of the quadriceps femoris muscles for two months postoperatively was studied. There was also immediate unbearable pain of the lower extremities after DBX-reconstruction of bilateral patellar chondrodysplasia.

Methods: ENMG and lumbar magnetic stimulation (MEP) follow-up.

Results: There was no distinct lesion of the motor axons of the femoral or other nerves in ENMG or MEP six weeks postoperatively. After a follow-up of eight months, the paresis was subsided and a complete recovery took place in two years.

Conclusion: High pressure of the tourniquet may injure muscle spindles. Decreased Ia-afferent activity may severely inhibit voluntary motor effort.

Published

2022-02-14

How to Cite

Juhani V. Partanen. (2022). Tourniquet Paralysis May Reflect Injury of Muscle Spindles: A Case Report . Issues and Developments in Medicine and Medical Research Vol. 9, 20–25. https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/idmmr/v9/1902A