Unilateral Calf Atrophy: A Case Series of Clinical and Electrodiagnostic Findings With a Review of the Literature

CUREUS JOURNAL OF MEDICAL SCIENCE(2024)

Cited 0|Views3
No score
Abstract
Unilateral calf atrophy may result from several medical conditions, such as lumbar radiculopathy, asymmetric myopathy/dystrophy, a Baker's (popliteal) cyst leading to tibial nerve compression, and disuse atrophy. We present a case series of four patients with unilateral calf atrophy, including chronic neurogenic atrophy (benign focal amyotrophy, one patient), tibial nerve compression at the popliteal fossa by a Baker's cyst (one patient), and disuse atrophy (two patients). All four patients underwent electrodiagnostic (EDX) studies, and two of them had denervation changes of the gastrocnemius. One patient underwent an ultrasound (US), which revealed a large cyst in the popliteal fossa causing compression of the tibial nerve. The differential diagnosis of unilateral calf atrophy as well as diagnostic techniques to confirm the underlying pathology are described. EDX and US studies are useful in differentiating between the varied conditions that may cause asymmetric calf muscle wasting.
More
Translated text
Key words
electromyography,nerve conduction studies,ultrasound,electrodiagnostic studies,tibial nerve,neurosurgery,calf atrophy,neurology
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined