Cargando…

Ultrasound of the palmar aspect of the hand: normal anatomy and clinical applications of intrinsic muscles imaging

Intrinsic hand muscles play a fundamental role in tuning the fine motricity of the hand and may be affected by several pathologic conditions, including traumatic injuries, atrophic changes induced by denervation, and space-occupying masses. Modern hand surgery techniques allow to target several hand...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Picasso, Riccardo, Zaottini, Federico, Pistoia, Federico, Perez, Maribel Miguel, Macciò, Marta, Bianco, Deborah, Rinaldi, Simone, Pansecchi, Michelle, Rossi, Gabriele, Tovt, Luca, Martinoli, Carlo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Sciendo 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10508329/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37732107
http://dx.doi.org/10.15557/jou.2023.0021
_version_ 1785107514589708288
author Picasso, Riccardo
Zaottini, Federico
Pistoia, Federico
Perez, Maribel Miguel
Macciò, Marta
Bianco, Deborah
Rinaldi, Simone
Pansecchi, Michelle
Rossi, Gabriele
Tovt, Luca
Martinoli, Carlo
author_facet Picasso, Riccardo
Zaottini, Federico
Pistoia, Federico
Perez, Maribel Miguel
Macciò, Marta
Bianco, Deborah
Rinaldi, Simone
Pansecchi, Michelle
Rossi, Gabriele
Tovt, Luca
Martinoli, Carlo
author_sort Picasso, Riccardo
collection PubMed
description Intrinsic hand muscles play a fundamental role in tuning the fine motricity of the hand and may be affected by several pathologic conditions, including traumatic injuries, atrophic changes induced by denervation, and space-occupying masses. Modern hand surgery techniques allow to target several hand muscle pathologies and, as a direct consequence, requests for hand imaging now carry increasingly complex diagnostic questions. The progressive refinement of ultrasound technology and the current availability of high and ultra-high frequency linear transducers that allow the investigation of intrinsic hand muscles and tendons with incomparable resolution have made this modality an essential tool for the evaluation of pathological processes involving these tiny structures. Indeed, intrinsic hand muscles lie in a superficial position and are amenable to investigation by means of transducers with frequency bands superior to 20 MHz, offering clear advantages in terms of resolution and costs compared to magnetic resonance imaging. In addition, ultrasound allows to perform dynamic maneuvers that can critically enhance its diagnostic power, by examining the questioned structure during stress tests that simulate the conditions eliciting clinical symptoms. The present article aims to review the anatomy, the ultrasound scanning technique, and the clinical application of thenar, hypothenar, lumbricals and interossei muscles imaging, also showing some examples of pathology involving these structures.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10508329
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Sciendo
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-105083292023-09-20 Ultrasound of the palmar aspect of the hand: normal anatomy and clinical applications of intrinsic muscles imaging Picasso, Riccardo Zaottini, Federico Pistoia, Federico Perez, Maribel Miguel Macciò, Marta Bianco, Deborah Rinaldi, Simone Pansecchi, Michelle Rossi, Gabriele Tovt, Luca Martinoli, Carlo J Ultrason Review Paper Intrinsic hand muscles play a fundamental role in tuning the fine motricity of the hand and may be affected by several pathologic conditions, including traumatic injuries, atrophic changes induced by denervation, and space-occupying masses. Modern hand surgery techniques allow to target several hand muscle pathologies and, as a direct consequence, requests for hand imaging now carry increasingly complex diagnostic questions. The progressive refinement of ultrasound technology and the current availability of high and ultra-high frequency linear transducers that allow the investigation of intrinsic hand muscles and tendons with incomparable resolution have made this modality an essential tool for the evaluation of pathological processes involving these tiny structures. Indeed, intrinsic hand muscles lie in a superficial position and are amenable to investigation by means of transducers with frequency bands superior to 20 MHz, offering clear advantages in terms of resolution and costs compared to magnetic resonance imaging. In addition, ultrasound allows to perform dynamic maneuvers that can critically enhance its diagnostic power, by examining the questioned structure during stress tests that simulate the conditions eliciting clinical symptoms. The present article aims to review the anatomy, the ultrasound scanning technique, and the clinical application of thenar, hypothenar, lumbricals and interossei muscles imaging, also showing some examples of pathology involving these structures. Sciendo 2023-09-11 /pmc/articles/PMC10508329/ /pubmed/37732107 http://dx.doi.org/10.15557/jou.2023.0021 Text en © 2023 Riccardo Picasso et al., published by Sciendo https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
spellingShingle Review Paper
Picasso, Riccardo
Zaottini, Federico
Pistoia, Federico
Perez, Maribel Miguel
Macciò, Marta
Bianco, Deborah
Rinaldi, Simone
Pansecchi, Michelle
Rossi, Gabriele
Tovt, Luca
Martinoli, Carlo
Ultrasound of the palmar aspect of the hand: normal anatomy and clinical applications of intrinsic muscles imaging
title Ultrasound of the palmar aspect of the hand: normal anatomy and clinical applications of intrinsic muscles imaging
title_full Ultrasound of the palmar aspect of the hand: normal anatomy and clinical applications of intrinsic muscles imaging
title_fullStr Ultrasound of the palmar aspect of the hand: normal anatomy and clinical applications of intrinsic muscles imaging
title_full_unstemmed Ultrasound of the palmar aspect of the hand: normal anatomy and clinical applications of intrinsic muscles imaging
title_short Ultrasound of the palmar aspect of the hand: normal anatomy and clinical applications of intrinsic muscles imaging
title_sort ultrasound of the palmar aspect of the hand: normal anatomy and clinical applications of intrinsic muscles imaging
topic Review Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10508329/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37732107
http://dx.doi.org/10.15557/jou.2023.0021
work_keys_str_mv AT picassoriccardo ultrasoundofthepalmaraspectofthehandnormalanatomyandclinicalapplicationsofintrinsicmusclesimaging
AT zaottinifederico ultrasoundofthepalmaraspectofthehandnormalanatomyandclinicalapplicationsofintrinsicmusclesimaging
AT pistoiafederico ultrasoundofthepalmaraspectofthehandnormalanatomyandclinicalapplicationsofintrinsicmusclesimaging
AT perezmaribelmiguel ultrasoundofthepalmaraspectofthehandnormalanatomyandclinicalapplicationsofintrinsicmusclesimaging
AT macciomarta ultrasoundofthepalmaraspectofthehandnormalanatomyandclinicalapplicationsofintrinsicmusclesimaging
AT biancodeborah ultrasoundofthepalmaraspectofthehandnormalanatomyandclinicalapplicationsofintrinsicmusclesimaging
AT rinaldisimone ultrasoundofthepalmaraspectofthehandnormalanatomyandclinicalapplicationsofintrinsicmusclesimaging
AT pansecchimichelle ultrasoundofthepalmaraspectofthehandnormalanatomyandclinicalapplicationsofintrinsicmusclesimaging
AT rossigabriele ultrasoundofthepalmaraspectofthehandnormalanatomyandclinicalapplicationsofintrinsicmusclesimaging
AT tovtluca ultrasoundofthepalmaraspectofthehandnormalanatomyandclinicalapplicationsofintrinsicmusclesimaging
AT martinolicarlo ultrasoundofthepalmaraspectofthehandnormalanatomyandclinicalapplicationsofintrinsicmusclesimaging