We report a case of isolated paralysis of the right adductor pollicis in a 30-year-old woman. Electromyographic study showed involvement of the deep motor branch of the ulnar nerve. A ganglion and an anomalous muscle were both ruled out clinically and by MRI as a possible cause of the paralysis. At surgical exploration, we found a fibrous band joining the pisiform and the hook of the hamate bone that compressed the deep motor branch of the ulnar nerve. The fibrous band was excised, and a neurolysis of the motor branch of the ulnar nerve was performed. At followup, eight months later, the patient had fully recovered strength of the adductor muscle.
CITATION STYLE
De Maio, F., Bisicchia, S., Farsetti, P., & Ippolito, E. (2011). Isolated Paralysis of the Adductor Pollicis: A Case Report. Advances in Orthopedics, 2011, 1–3. https://doi.org/10.4061/2011/321020
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