Ultrasonographic evaluation of de Quervain disease

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Abstract

De Quervain disease is a job-related tenosynovitis that affects the synovial sheath of the tendons of the abductor pollicis longus and extensor pollicis brevis muscles; it is associated with pain and functional impairment and progresses to cause local fibrosis with blockage or triggering of the thumb. High-resolution ultrasonography of the wrist was performed in eight patients with de Quervain disease; the examination was performed in axial and coronal scans with a 13 MHz linear transducer. The evaluation of normal wrists helped to define the normal sonographic anatomy of the first extensor compartment; obvious changes of the tendon sheath were noted in all cases of de Quervain disease (thickening and edema of the synovial sheath and fluid within the sheath). We conclude that ultrasonography is able to confirm the clinical diagnosis of de Quervain disease and may have a role in the follow-up of this disorder.

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Giovagnorio, F., Andreoli, C., & De Cicco, M. L. (1997). Ultrasonographic evaluation of de Quervain disease. Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine, 16(10), 685–689. https://doi.org/10.7863/jum.1997.16.10.685

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