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  • Summary
    • Cubital Tunnel Syndrome is a compressive neuropathy of the ulnar nerve caused by anatomic compression in the medial elbow.
    • Diagnosis is made clinically with presence of sensory changes to the ring and little finger, intrinsic muscle weakness and a positive tinel's sign over the cubital tunnel.
    • Treatment may be nonoperative modalities such as bracing or surgical decompression depending on the severity and duration of symptoms, and success of nonoperative treatment.
  • Epidemiology
    • Incidence
      • common
        • ~30 per 100,000 person annually
          • second most common compression neuropathy of upper extremity
    • Demographics
      • males > females
        • females more likely to present at earlier age
      • incidence increases with age in both men and women
  • Etiology
    • Pathophysiology
      • Cubital tunnel syndrome results from compression and traction on the ulnar nerve
      • Sites of entrapment
        • most common
          • between the two heads of FCU/aponeurosis (most common site)
          • within arcade of Struthers (hiatus in medial intermuscular septum)
          • between Osborne's ligament and MCL
        • less common sites of compression include
          • medial head of triceps
          • medial intermuscular septum
          • medial epicondyle
          • fascial bands within FCU
          • anconeus epitrochlearis (anomalous muscle from the medial olecranon to the medial epicondyle)
          • aponeurosis of FDS proximal edge
        • external sources of compression
          • fractures and medial epicondyle nonunions
          • osteophytes
          • heterotopic ossification
          • tumors and ganglion cysts
          • post-traumatic
    • Associated conditions
      • cubitus varus or valgus deformities
      • medial epicondylitis
      • burns
      • elbow contracture release
  • Anatomy
    • Ulnar nerve
      • arises from the medial cord of the brachial plexus (C8-T1)
      • lies posteromedial to brachial artery in anterior compartment of upper arm
      • pierces IM septum at arcade of Struthers 8 cm proximal to the medial epicondyle
      • runs behind medial epicondyle within the cubital tunnel
      • enters forearm between 2 heads (humeral and ulnar heads) of FCU 
      • runs between FCU and FDP
      • passes superficial to the transverse carpal ligament at the wrist
    • Cubital tunnel
      • roof
        • formed by FCU fascia and Osborne's ligament (travels from the medial epicondyle to the olecranon)
      • floor
        • formed by posterior oblique and transverse bands of MCL and elbow joint capsule
      • walls
        • formed by medial epicondyle and olecranon
  • Classification
      • McGowan and Dellon
      • Type 1
      • Subjective sensory symptoms without objective loss of two-point sensibility or muscular atrophy
      • Type 2A
      • Sensory symptoms + weakness on pinch and grip without atrophy
      • Type 2B
      • Sensory symptoms + atrophy and intrinsic muscle strength ≤ 3
      • Type 3
      • Profound muscular atrophy and sensory disturbance
  • Presentation
    • Symptoms
      • paresthesias of small finger, ulnar half of ring finger, and ulnar dorsal hand
        • exacerbating activities include
          • cell phone use (excessive flexion)
          • occupational or athletic activities requiring repetitive elbow flexion and valgus stress
      • night symptoms
        • caused by sleeping with arm in flexion
    • Physical exam
      • inspection and palpation
        • interosseous and first web space atrophy
        • ring and small finger clawing
        • observe ulnar nerve subluxation over the medial epicondyle as the elbow moves through a flexion-extension arc
      • sensory
        • decreased sensation in ulnar 1-1/2 digits
      • motor
        • loss of the ulnar nerve results in paralysis of intrinsic muscles (adductor pollicis, deep head FPB, interossei, and lumbricals 3 and 4) which leads to
          • weakened grasp
            • from loss of MP joint flexion power
          • weak pinch
            • from loss of thumb adduction (as much as 70% of pinch strength is lost)
          • Froment sign
            • compensatory thumb IP flexion by FPL (AIN) during key pinch
              • compensates for the loss of metacarpal adduction by adductor pollicis (ulna n.)
                • adductor pollicis muscle normally acts as a MCP flexor, first metacarpal adductor, and IP extensor
          • Jeanne sign
            • compensatory thumb MCP hyperextension and thumb adduction by EPL (radial n.) with key pinch
              • compensates for loss of IP extension and thumb adduction by adductor pollicis (ulna n.)
          • Wartenberg sign
            • persistent small finger abduction and extension during attempted adduction secondary to weak 3rd palmar interosseous and small finger lumbrical
          • Masse sign
            • palmar arch flattening and loss of ulnar hand elevation secondary to weak opponens digiti quinti and decreased small finger MCP flexion
      • extrinsic weakness
        • Pollock's sign
          • inability to flex DIPJ of ring and small fingers (weak FDP)
      • provocative tests
        • Tinel sign positive over cubital tunnel
        • elbow flexion test
          • positive when flexion of the elbow for > 60 seconds reproduces symptoms
        • direct cubital tunnel compression exacerbates symptoms
  • Studies
    • EMG / NCS
      • helpful in establishing diagnosis and prognosis
      • threshold for diagnosis
        • conduction velocity <50 m/sec across elbow
        • low amplitudes of sensory nerve action potentials and compound muscle action potentials
  • Differential
    • Ulnar Tunnel Syndrome
      • key findings that differentiate cubital tunnel syndrome from ulnar tunnel syndrome
        • found with cubital tunnel syndrome
          • less clawing
          • sensory deficit to dorsum of the hand
          • motor deficit to ulnar-innervated extrinsic muscles
          • Tinel sign at the elbow
          • positive elbow flexion test
    • C8 radiculopathy 
      • key finding that differentiate cubital tunnel syndrome from a C8 radiculpathy
        • cubital tunnel syndrome
          • weakness to distal phalanx flexion of middle and index finger (difficulty with fine motor function)
          • paresthesias in ring and little finger
        • C8 radiculopathy
          • symptoms improve with shoulder abduction
  • Treatment
    • Nonoperative
      • NSAIDs, activity modification, and nighttime elbow extension splinting
        • indications
          • first line of treatment with mild symptoms
        • outcomes
          • management is effective in ~50% of cases
    • Operative
      • in situ ulnar nerve decompression without transposition
        • indications
          • when nonoperative management fails
          • before motor denervation occurs
        • outcomes
          • meta-analyses have shown similar clinical results with significantly fewer complications compared to decompression with transposition
          • 80-90% good results when symptoms are intermittent and denervation has not yet occurred
          • poor prognosis correlates most with intrinsic muscle atrophy
      • ulnar nerve decompression and anterior transposition
        • indications
          • failed in situ release
          • throwing athlete
          • patient with poor ulnar nerve bed from tumor, osteophyte, or heterotopic bone
        • outcomes
          • similar outcomes to in situ release but increased risk of creating a new point of compression
          • Improved outcomes with unstable nerves in the pediatric population
      • medial epicondylectomy
        • indications
          • visible and symptomatic subluxating ulnar nerve
          • thin patients with inadequate subcutaneous tissue to perform a transposition
        • outcomes
          • risk of destabilizing the medial elbow by damaging the medial ulnar collateral ligament
  • Techniques
    • NSAIDs, activity modification, and nighttime elbow extension splinting
      • technique
        • night bracing in 45° extension with forearm in neutral rotation
    • In situ ulnar nerve decompression
      • releasing the fascial structures superficial to the ulnar nerve along the medial aspect of the elbow
      • 4-cm incision midway between the olecranon and medial epicondyle
      • distally release Osborne ligament and the superficial and deep fascia of FCU
      • proximally release the fascia between the medial triceps and medial intermuscular septum
      • avoid circumferential dissection of the nerve to minimize devascularization and to avoid creating hypermobility of the nerve
      • endoscopically-assisted cubital tunnel release is an option
        • favorable early results but lacks long-term data
    • Decompression and transposition (submuscular, intramuscular, or subcutaneous)
      • decompress the nerve and circumferentially dissect the nerve to allow for transposition
      • excise the medial intermuscular septum
      • anteriorly transpose the nerve
        • secured with subcutaneous tissue,
        • placed anterior to a fascial sling,
        • or placed within or beneath the flexor pronator mass
    • Medial Epicondylectomy
      • decompress the nerve and then perform an oblique osteotomy of the medial epicondyle
      • preserve the insertion of the MCL + repair the periosteum
  • Complications
    • Recurrence
      • secondary to inadequate decompression, perineural scarring, or tethering at the intermuscular septum or FCU fascia
      • higher rate of recurrence than after carpal tunnel release
    • Neuroma formation
      • iatrogenic injury to a branch of the medial antebrachial cutaneous nerve may cause persistent posteromedial elbow pain 
        • crosses field 3cm distal to medial epicondyle 
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