Summary
Neuralgic amyotrophy (also referred to as brachial neuritis or Parsonage-Turner syndrome) is a self-limiting inflammatory disorder of the brachial plexus, that mainly affects males between 20–30 years of age. There are two clinically similar, yet etiologically distinct forms of neuralgic amyotrophy (NA). Idiopathic NA is more common, often unilateral, and non-recurrent. It is thought to be an immune-mediated process triggered by preceding viral infection, immunization, or trauma. Hereditary NA is a rare, autosomal dominant condition that often affects both shoulders and is characterized by recurrent symptoms. In both types, patients present with acute onset of excruciating shoulder pain that lasts for weeks followed by patchy lower motor neuron paresis of the proximal muscles in the affected arm. Diagnosis is clinical, with nerve conduction studies and needle electromyography performed to identify which nerves are affected. Treatment is mainly supportive and involves analgesia and physical therapy. Most patients recover complete muscle strength within 2 years.
Epidemiology
Etiology
-
Idiopathic NA (more common)
- Likely immune-mediated
- Potential triggers: recent viral infection/immunization; ; mechanical strain on the arm/shoulder; trauma; surgery; childbirth; vasculitis (temporal arteritis, PAN, SLE)
-
Hereditary NA
- Rare
- Autosomal dominant
References:[1][3][4][5][6]
Pathophysiology
The exact pathophysiology is unknown, but it is believed to be multifactorial.
- Environmental factors (e.g., viral infection, immunization, surgery) → activation of the immune system
- Mechanical factors (e.g., repetitive strain, recent strenuous exercise) → repeated stretching of the brachial plexus nerves → predisposition of the brachial plexus to immune-mediated injury
A combination of the above factors → patchy inflammation of the brachial plexus → axonal injury of the affected nerves → severe burning pain, followed by paresis of the muscles supplied by the affected nerve
References:[3]
Clinical features
-
Shoulder pain
- Acute phase
- Chronic phase
-
Progressive weakness and atrophy of the shoulder/arm muscles
- Occurs ∼ 2 weeks after the acute onset of pain
- Patchy involvement of more than one nerve of the brachial plexus
- Different degrees of lower motor neuron paresis of muscles innervated by the same peripheral nerve
- Nerves commonly affected:
- Suprascapular nerve; → weak abduction and external rotation of the shoulder
- Long thoracic nerve → winging of the scapula
- Axillary nerve; → weak abduction of the arm
- Subscapular nerve; → weak internal rotation of the shoulder
- Sensory loss: hypoesthesia: (numbness); paresthesia or dysesthesia (painful sensation to light touch) in the arm, forearm, and/or hand
- Autonomic dysfunction: edema, excessive sweating, faster growth of hair and nails on the affected limb
References:[1][3][4][5][6][7][8][9]
Diagnostics
NA is mainly a clinical diagnosis.
-
Assessment of damage localization and severity
- Nerve conduction studies: show conduction block in the affected nerves
- Needle electromyography: show axonal degeneration; help differentiate between muscular and neural causes of weakness
-
Exclusion of differential diagnoses
- Chest x-ray: to rule out Pancoast tumor or thoracic outlet syndrome
- MRI of the cervical spine: to rule out cervical disc disease/degeneration
- MRI of the shoulder: to rule out rotator cuff tears/impingement
References:[3][4][6][7][8]
Differential diagnoses
- Upper limb weakness and/or proximal muscle atrophy
- Acute severe pain: myocardial infarction, herpes zoster neuritis
References:[1][3][4][5]
The differential diagnoses listed here are not exhaustive.
Treatment
There is no specific causative treatment for NA. The condition is self-limiting and is treated symptomatically.
-
Analgesia
- Acute phase: combination of a long-acting NSAID (e.g., diclofenac) and an opiate (e.g., morphine)
- Chronic phase: gabapentin, carbamazepine, or amitriptyline
-
Physical therapy
- Initiated after acute pain has subsided
- Prevents/minimizes muscular atrophy and preserves normal range of motion of the shoulder joint
- Surgery: nerve grafts or tendon transfers are possible; only considered in protracted disease courses (> 2 years)
References:[2][3][4][6][7][10][11]
Prognosis
- Prognosis is variable
-
Recurrence
- Idiopathic NA: often non-recurrent
- Hereditary NA: ∼ 75% of patients will have recurrent NA
References:[1][3][4][9]