J Reconstr Microsurg 1995; 11(4): 271-275
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-1006543
ORIGINAL ARTICLE

© 1995 by Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc.

The Scalene Reflex: Relationship Between Increased Median or Ulnar Nerve Pressure and Scalene Muscle Activity

Jose J. Monsivais, Yang Sun, T. P. Rajashekhar
  • Hand and Microsurgery Center of El Paso, Departments of Orthopaedics and Anesthesiology, Texas Tech School of Medicine, and University of Texas at El Paso, Texas
Further Information

Publication History

Accepted for publication 1995

Publication Date:
08 March 2008 (online)

ABSTRACT

Neck pain, headaches, upper thoracic pain, and dystonic scalene muscles are common findings in patients who have severe entrapment neuropathies of the upper extremities. This problem was taken to the laboratory in an attempt to discover the correlation between distal entrapment neuropathies, brachial plexus entrapments, and prominent scalenus muscles.

When increased pressure (over 40 mmHg) was applied to the median and ulnar nerves in the forelimbs of eight goats, increased electromyographic activity was noted in the ipsilateral scalenus muscle. Pressures ranging from 100 to 150 mmHg caused increased electromyographic activity on the contralateral scalene muscle, and the authors postulate that it is mediated by the gamma afferent and efferent system.

This relationship may explain the commonly found neck pain and muscle spasm in patients with peripheral neuropathies, and it represents a link between the somatic efferent nerves and the gamma motor neuron system. At present, the same phenomenon has been documented in 30 humans with the diagnosis of brachial plexus entrapment.

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