Abstract

The purpose of this study was to evaluate the ability to discriminate temperatures in patients following peripheral nerve injury. Knowing that temperature sensibility is mediated by different receptors, the scores were compared to other functional hand scores in order to determine whether the ability to discriminate temperatures is restored to a different extent compared with other commonly evaluated hand function modalities. The test was performed using the NTE-2 device (Physitemp Instruments Inc., 154 Huron Avenue, Clifton, New Jersey, USA). Out of 57 patients, 27 had normal thermal discrimination scores, and 9 could not tell the temperatures apart in the differences set on the measuring device. Overall, patients with better thermal discrimination had also better hand function as evaluated with different methods. However, some patients who did regain the ability to differentiate temperatures correctly did not have any measurable return of hand function in other tests. Thermal discrimination scores correlated similarly with different functional scores, except for vibration sensibility, which did not show any significant correlation. The development and severity of cold intolerance seem to be unrelated to temperature sense.

Highlights

  • Regeneration after peripheral nerve injury has been extensively studied

  • Some patients who did regain the ability to differentiate temperatures correctly did not have any measurable return of hand function in other tests (Table 4)

  • The ability to feel temperatures and temperature differences between objects is an important feature in sensory function of the human body

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Summary

Introduction

Regeneration after peripheral nerve injury has been extensively studied. Many studies and authors have contributed to our better understanding of hand function after nerve injury and regeneration. The evaluation of nerve function is performed with many different methods that assess different sensory modalities and the contribution of these modalities to overall hand function. To the best of the author’s knowledge, the ability of discriminating between different temperatures following peripheral nerve injuries has not been evaluated before [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10]. The sensory function is a complex modality that requires correct functioning of several different receptors, nerve fibers, nervous system pathways, and brain centers. Used evaluation methods, such as Medical Research Council sensory evaluation test, the

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