The obturator nerve lies deep within the pelvis, and it can be damaged by direct injury during surgery. In this study, nerve conduction was used to confirm an obturator nerve injury in a patient who presented with hip adductor weakness following gynecological surgery for endometrial cancer. A 56-year-old woman complained of weakness in the right adductor muscles after a laparoscopic hysterectomy due to endometrial cancer. Seven days after surgery, the degree of weakness of the right hip adductor was Medical Research Council (MRC) Scale 1; thus, a nerve conduction velocity test was conducted. To obtain the compound muscle action potentials of the obturator nerve, stimulation was performed (1.5 cm inferior and 1.5 cm lateral to the pubic tubercle) with a surface electrical simulator and recording (midpoint of the right medial thigh) of the adductor muscles. The compound muscle action potentials of the right obturator nerve showed lower amplitude (left side: 2.7 mV vs. right side: 0.3 mV) and delayed onset latency (left side: 3.2 ms vs. right side: 2.2 ms). These results indicate a partial right obturator neuropathy. Therefore, nerve conduction could be useful to diagnose an early-stage obturator nerve injury and provide information on the degree of damage.
CITATION STYLE
Chang, M. C., Choi, K. T., Cho, H. K., Kim, Y. M., & Kim, T. U. (2021). Obturator nerve injury diagnosed by nerve conduction: A case report. Annals of Palliative Medicine, 10(6), 7069–7072. https://doi.org/10.21037/apm-20-1699
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