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Updated: Feb 1 2020

Ulnar nerve

  • Origin of Ulnar Nerve
    • Ulnar nerve comes from the medial cord of the brachial plexus (C8-T1)
  • Course of Ulnar Nerve
    • Lies posteromedial to brachial artery in anterior compartment of upper 1/2 arm
    • Pierces medial IM septa at the arcade of Struthers ~ 8cm from medial epicondyle and lies with triceps
    • Travels on back of medial epicondyle; vulnerable in fractures
      • Runs with superior ulnar collateral artery
      • Cubital tunnel
        • roof - cubital tunnel retinaculum (medial epicondyle to olecranon) / osbourne’s fascia (extension of deep forearm fascia between heads of FCU)
        • floor - posterior and transverse bands of MCL
    • Does send small sensory branch to elbow that can be sacrificed
    • Passes into forearm between 2 heads of flexor carpi ulnaris
    • Runs between FCU + FDP
    • At the wrist, the ulnar nerve and artery pass superficial to the flexor retinaculum
  • Motor Innervation of Ulnar Nerve
    • motor
      • forearm
        • flexor carpi ulnaris
        • flexor digitorum profundus III and IV
      • thenar
        • adductor pollicis
        • deep head of flexor pollicis brevis (FPB)
      • fingers
        • dorsal interosseous (abduction) & palmar interosseous (adduction)
        • 3rd & 4th lumbrical (1st & 2nd by median nerve)
      • digiti minimi
        • abductor digiti minimi
        • opponens digiti minimi
        • flexor digiti minimi
    • sensory branches of ulnar nerve
      • dorsal cutaneous branch
      • palmar cutaneous branch
      • superficial terminal branches
  • Clinical Conditions
    • Cubital Tunnel Syndrome compression sites
      • Arcade of Struthers (tunnel 8 cm proximal to medial epicondyle formed by fibrous connection between IM septum and medial head of triceps)
      • medial intermuscular septum
      • medial epicondyle (osteophytes)
      • cubital tunnel retinaculum (taught with flexion)
        • often the retinaculum is consistent with Osborne’s ligament
      • aponeurosis of the two heads of the FCU (arcuate ligament) is often consistent with the retinaculum and osbournes ligament, however these fibers meet perpendicular to retinaculum/osbournes ligament
      • deep flexor/pronator aponeurosis (most distal site - approximately 4 cm distal to medial epicondyle)
      • The internal anatomy of the ulnar n can explain the predominance of hand sx from cubital tunnel syndrome – the fibers to FCU and FDP are central and hand intrinsic fibers are peripheral!
    • Ulnar tunnel syndrome: compression in Guyon’s Canal
      • no involvement of dorsal cutaneous nerve since it branches before canal
      • no involvement of FDP of 4th & 5th and FCU
      • ganglia most common cause (from triquetrohamate joint, 32-48%)
      • other causes: other mass, trauma (Distal radius/ulna, hook of hamate), muscle anomaly, ulnar artery aneurysm
      • Zones of compression
        • Zone 1: proximal to bifurcation: hook of hamate fx & ganglia, motor & sensory findings
        • Zone 2: deep motor branch; hook of hamate fx & ganglia, motor sx
        • Zone 3: superficial sensory branch; ulnar artery thrombosis
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