Basketball Player With A Limp - Page #4
 

Working Diagnosis:
Left tibial non-malignant intraneural perineurioma

Treatment:
Excisional biopsy and epineurotomy of the left tibial nerve tumor of both lesions

Outcome:
The patient tolerated the procedure well. Pathology results confirmed both left tibial nerve biopsies to be diagnostic for intraneural perineurioma, negative for malignancy. Four months following the procedure his left gastroc-soleus complex has improved strength to 4/5. Counseled that full recovery may take several months vs. being at his new baseline. He continues to play basketball recreationally

Author's Comments:
Clinical suspicion must remain high for a neuropathic cause when asymmetric weakness does not have a clinical mechanism of injury for which to correlate

Perineurioma, specifically the intraneural form, are rare and often go unrecognized due to their insidious development in young patients

Commonly intraneural Perineuriomas lead to slowly progressive motor changes, muscle atrophy and occasionally alterations in sensation

Diagnosis can be revealed using EMG and MRI with contrast enhancement

Once a targeted nerve biopsy is performed, a detailed microscopic evaluation can rule out malignancy and differentiation from other neuromas such as Schwannomas which are difficult to distinguish clinically

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NOTE: For more information, please contact the AMSSM, 4000 W. 114th Street, Suite 100, Leawood, KS 66211 (913) 327-1415.
 

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4000 W. 114th Street, Suite 100
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Phone: 913.327.1415


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