Anterior interosseous neuropathy

Background

Nerves of the left upper extremity with anterior interosseous (volar interosseus) labeled at center right.
  • Anterior interosseous nerve (C5-T1), also known as the volar interosseous nerve, is a branch of the median nerve that supplies motor innervation to the deep forearm muscles
  • Compression or injury can cause an isolated AIN palsy
  • Brachial plexopathy or cervical spine pathologies may present with combined median nerve palsies

Causes

Clinical Features

  • May have forearm pain although not as common in other median nerve compression syndromes[1]
  • Weakness of finger flexion (FDL), thumb flexion (FPL), and pronation (pronator quadratus)
  • Inability to hold a piece of paper between index and thumb fingertips (can't make "OK" sign)
  • No sensory loss

Differential Diagnosis

Upper extremity peripheral nerve syndromes

Median Nerve Syndromes

Ulnar Nerve Syndromes

Radial Nerve Syndromes

Proximal Neuropathies

Other

Evaluation

  • Clinical diagnosis
  • Plain films
  • Outpatient EMG or MRI

Management

  • Nonoperative: rest, activity modification, NSAIDs, splinting
  • Operative decompression: compressive masses

Disposition

  • Discharge with orthopedic follow up

See Also

External Links

References

  1. Dang AC et al. Unusual Compression Neuropathies of the Forearm, Part 2: Median Nerve. JHS. 2009;34A:1915-1920.