Isolated Paralysis of the Adductor Pollicis: A Case Report

  • De Maio F
  • Bisicchia S
  • Farsetti P
  • et al.
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Abstract

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.

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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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