Abstract
Controversy surrounds the treatment of recurrent cubital tunnel syndrome after previous
surgery. Irrespective of the surgical technique, namely pure decompression in the
ulnar groove and the cubital tunnel distal of the medial epicondyle, and the different
methods of volar transposition (subcutaneous, intramuscular, and submuscular), the
results of surgical therapy of cubital tunnel syndrome are often not favorable, especially
in cases of long-standing symptoms and severe deficits. Twenty-two patients who had
previously undergone surgical treatment for ulnar nerve entrapment at the elbow were
evaluated because of persistent or recurrent pain, paresthesia, numbness, and motor
weakness. Ten patients had undergone a nerve transposition, 5 patients underwent a
simple decompression of the ulnar nerve, and 7 patients experienced two previous operations
with different surgical techniques. Two patients underwent surgery at our hospital,
whereas 20 patients underwent their primary surgery at other institutions. Various
surgical techniques were used during the subsequent surgery, such as external neurolysis,
subcutaneous anterior transposition, and subsequent transfer of the nerve back into
the sulcus. The causes of continued or recurrent symptoms after initial surgery included
dense perineural fibrosis of the nerve after subcutaneous transposition, adhesions
of the nerve to the medial epicondyle and retention of the medial intermuscular septum.
The average follow-up after the last procedure was 7 months (2 - 20 months). All 7
patients with subsequent transfer of the ulnar nerve back into the sulcus became pain-free,
whereas only 11 of 15 patients who had external neurolysis or subcutaneous transposition
became free of pain or experienced reduced pain. The recovery of motor function and
return of sensibility were variable and unpredictable. In summary, reoperation after
primary surgery of cubital tunnel syndrome gave satisfactory results in 18 of 22 cases.
Subsequent transfer of the ulnar nerve back into the sulcus promises to be useful
in cases in which subcutaneous transposition had not been successful.
Key words
Recurrent Cubital Tunnel Syndrome - Subsequent Surgery - Ulnar Nerve
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R. FilippiM. D.
Neurosurgical Department, Medical School of the University Mainz
Langenbeckstr. 1
55131 Mainz
Germany