Do not forget the brachial plexus-prevalence of distal brachial plexus pathology on routine shoulder MRI. European radiology Antil, N. n., ElGuindy, Y. n., Lutz, A. M. 2020

Abstract

Most of the shoulder magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) examination focuses on internal joint structures but disregarding other structures like the distal brachial plexus, which may miss important findings. Hereby, we attempt to evaluate the prevalence of distal brachial plexus abnormalities and/or muscular denervation changes seen on routine shoulder MRI examinations and discuss common pathologies affecting the distal brachial plexus.A total of 701 routine shoulder MRI studies were evaluated. The evaluation of each exam was focused on the visualized brachial plexus elements and musculature abnormalities in each case. If any abnormalities of plexus and/or musculature were found, potential underlying etiologies such as paralabral or spinoglenoid notch cysts, infiltrative/primary masses on imaging, history of prior viral illness, and radiation therapy were searched. It was then confirmed whether the abnormal findings were mentioned in the exam reports or not.Thirty-four cases (4.85%) demonstrated abnormal findings of the visualized brachial plexus cords or branches and/or musculature. It was observed that in 35.3% of exam reports these findings were not mentioned, mainly missing subtle nerve abnormalities, but correctly reporting and interpreting the encountered muscle abnormalities.The distal brachial plexus and its branches should be included in the search pattern for shoulder MRI examinations.• Normal T2 signal of the brachial plexus is iso- to slightly hyperintense to muscle but less signal intense than fluid. • Diffuse, geographic muscle edema is an indirect sign of brachial plexus pathology. • Increased T2-weighted nerve signal with or without caliber or course change should be reported and followed up to find the underlying etiology.

View details for DOI 10.1007/s00330-020-07476-3

View details for PubMedID 33236205