Postsurgical Parsonage-Turner Syndrome : A challenging diagnosis


Published online: Feb 27 2013

Skrallan VERHASSELT, Sebastiaan SCHELFAUT, Filiep BATAILLIE, Lieven MOKE

From the University Hospitals Leuven, Pellenberg, and the AZ Sint-Elisabeth, Herentals, Belgium

Abstract

Parsonage-Turner syndrome (PTS) is a distinct clinical syndrome, characterized by acute and severe (mostly) unilateral shoulder pain, followed by paresis and atrophy of the shoulder girdle, while the pain decreases.Most authors consider it as an immunemediated disorder. PTS is notoriously unrecognised and is usually diagnosed with delay. A PTS may also occur following a surgical procedure. Postsurgical PTS is an under-recognised and challenging clinical entity, as illustrated in the case reported here of a 59-year-old man, 4 weeks after anterior discectomy and fusion C5C7. In such cases, the differential diagnosis must be made with a complication of surgery, such as postoperative C5 palsy due for instance t o a migrated bone graft. Arguments for PTS are : a certain delay between surgery and symptoms, intolerable pain followed by weakness and improvement of pain complaints, divergent distribution of weakness, sensory deficit and pain, which may be confirmed by electrodiagnosis. Early recognition of postsurgical PTS may avoid unnecessary investigations or surgical exploration. It allows to treat the patient properly, leading to greater satisfaction of both surgeon and patient ; pain management, physical therapy and reassurance are the cornerstones.