Title: An Interesting Case of Thoracic Outlet Syndrome
1An Interesting Case of Thoracic Outlet Syndrome
- Laurel Romer, M.D.
- Primary Care Conference
- May 14, 2008
2Financial Disclosure
- I have received no outside financial support for
this presentation.
3Learning Objectives
- Understand the pathophysiology of TOS
- Learn the provocative maneuvers to diagnose TOS
- Understand treatment options for TOS
4Outline
- Case Presentation
- Definition
- Anatomy
- Epidemiology
- Differential Diagnosis
- Symptoms
- Physical Exam
- Diagnostic Testing
- Treatment
- Case Presentation
5Case Presentation
- EB is a 30 year old white female who presents
with left upper extremity swelling and pain,
which began while she was watching a movie in a
theater. She says that when she left the movie, a
couple of hours after the symptoms initially
began, she noted that the swelling of her left
arm was worse and there was pain in her shoulder
region. She also could not get her ring off of
her finger and her left hand was dusky. She did
not have any shortness of breath or pleuritic
chest pain. A few days before that the patient
had been shoveling snow during a heavy snow storm
and the day after that developed upper
respiratory symptoms including sore throat, sharp
chest pain, a sensation of her ears being plugged
and swollen glands in her neck.
6Case Presentation
- The patient had a Doppler evaluation which
revealed clot in the subclavian and axillary
veins. A CT scan of the chest revealed no
evidence of pulmonary embolism. She had a
hypercoagulable workup which was negative. She
was treated with heparin and then started on
Coumadin and consideration was given a couple of
times to giving thrombolytics but this was not
done. She was taken off her OCP.
7Case Presentation
- Ultrasound of the left upper extremity was
performed about 15 days after the onset of
symptoms and revealed interval partial
recanalization of the left subclavian vein and
slight increase in flow within the left axillary
vein in a patient with previous occlusive
thrombus in these vessels. - MRI of the left upper extremity was performed to
look for a compressive component to her
vasculature in the left upper extremity as a
cause for the DVT.
8TOS - Definition
- Adson first described his maneuver in 1927
- Thoracic Outlet Syndrome first coined in 1956
- Upper extremity symptoms due to compression of
the neurovascular bundle by various structures in
the area just above the first rib and behind the
clavicle - Etiologies include congenital bony structures,
fibromuscular abnormalities, posture, certain
movements, trauma
9TOS - Anatomy
Google Images
10TOS - Epidemiology
- 3 to 80 cases per 1000
- Ages 20-40
- Women gt Men (41)
- Neurogenic TOS (90) gt Venous TOS gt Arterial TOS
(lt1) - Cervical ribs occur in lt 1 of population
- 70 women
11TOS Differential Diagnosis
- Cervical disc disease
- Cervical facet disease
- Malignancies (Pancoast/local tumors, spinal cord
tumors) - Peripheral nerve entrapments (ulnar or median
nerve) - Brachial plexitis
- Rotator cuff injuries
- Fibromyalgia, muscle spasm
- Neurologic disorders (MS)
- Chest pain, angina
- Vasculitis
- Vasospastic disorder (Raynauds)
- Neuropathic syndromes of upper extremity
Talu, GK Agri 17 (2005), 5-9.
12TOS - Symptoms
- Neurogenic TOS
- Pain, paresthesia, and weakness in the hand, arm
and shoulder, plus neck pain and occipital
headaches - Raynauds phenomenon, hand coldness and color
changes are also seen frequently in NTOS
Sanders RJ, et al. J Vasc Surg, 46(3), 2007,
601-604.
13TOS - Symptoms
- Venous TOS
- Swelling of the arm, plus cyanosis is strong
evidence of subclavian vein obstruction - Pain often present, but may be absent
- Arm swelling distinguishes VTOS from ATOS and NTOS
Sanders RJ, et al. J Vasc Surg, 46(3), 2007,
601-604.
14TOS - Symptoms
- Arterial TOS
- Digital ischemia, claudication, pallor, coldness,
paresthesia and pain in the hand (but rarely in
the shoulder/neck) - Symptoms are a result of arterial emboli from a
mural thrombus in a subclavian artery aneurysm or
from thrombus forming distal to subclavian artery
stenosis
Sanders RJ, et al. J Vasc Surg, 46(3), 2007,
601-604.
15TOS Physical Exam
- VTOS
- arm swelling
- cyanosis
- distended superficial veins over the shoulder and
chest wall - NTOS
- Tenderness over scalene muscles
- Positive provocative tests
Sanders RJ, et al. J Vasc Surg, 46(3), 2007,
601-604.
16TOS Physical Exam
- Provocative tests
- Adson test
- Neck rotation and head tilting (ear to shoulder)
eliciting pain and paresthesia down the
contralateral side - 90AER - Abducting arms to 90 degrees in external
rotation, brings on symptoms within 60 seconds - Upper Limb Tension Test
Sanders RJ, et al. J Vasc Surg, 46(3), 2007,
601-604.
17Fig. Upper Limb Tension Test (ULTT). Position 1
Arms abducted to 90 with elbows
extended. Position 2 Dorsiflex wrists. Position
3 Tilt head to side, ear to shoulder. Each
maneuver progressively increases stretch on the
brachial plexus.
18TOS Diagnostic Testing
- Neck or chest xray
- Detects cervical rib or elongated C7 transverse
process - EMG/NCS
- Normal in large majority of clinically NTOS
- Most common finding in NTOS is ulnar neuropathy
- Recent study suggests NCV abnormalities of the
sensory medial antebrachial cutaneous nerve are
seen in NTOS - MRI/CT
- Venography/venous duplex
- VTOS
- Arteriography
- Only indicated in ATOS
Seror, O. Clin Neurophysiol 115 (2004),
2316-2322.
19TOS Treatment
- Conservative Management
- Massage, hydrotherapy and PT
- Behavioral modification/avoidance of provocative
activities - PT to strengthen muscles of the pectoral girdle
and restore normal posture - Improvement 50-90
20TOS Treatment
- Definitive management
- Surgical decompression of the neurovascular
bundle - First rib resection
- Scalenectomy
- Subclavian artery reconstruction
- Cervical sympathectomy
21Case Presentation
- A few months later, venous duplex ultrasound
appears normal. There is no evidence of
impingement on either side. Both veins are
patent by duplex but there is bilateral
impingement in multiple stress positions on both
the right and left side.
22Case Presentation
- EB met with a vascular surgeon who felt that she
was at high risk for recurrence of BUE DVT (off
anticoagulants) without definitive treatment - A left 1st rib resection was performed
- A few months later a right 1st rib resection was
performed - She was taken off anticoagulants
- She was restarted on her OCP along with Aspirin
81mg qd - She was strongly advised to continue longterm
with a shoulder girdle strengthening exercise
program
23References
- Barkhordarian, S. J Hand Surg 32 (4/2007),
565-570. - Demondion, X, et al. Radiographics 26 (2006),
1735-1750. - Sanders RJ, et al. J Vasc Surg, 46 (2007),
601-604. - Seror, O. Clin Neurophysiol 115 (2004),
2316-2322. - Talu, GK Agri 17 (2005), 5-9.
- Vanti C, et al. Eura Medicophys 43 (2007), 55-70.