Diagnosing Thoracic Outlet Syndrome: Current Approaches and Future Directions

The diagnosis of thoracic outlet syndrome (TOS) has long been a controversial and challenging one. Despite common presentations with pain in the neck and upper extremity, there are a host of presenting patterns that can vary within and between the subdivisions of neurogenic, venous, and arterial TOS...

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Main Authors: Sebastian Povlsen, Bo Povlsen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-03-01
Series:Diagnostics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2075-4418/8/1/21
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spelling doaj-a1fac8294b054df48819d06ebfd764192020-11-24T22:57:45ZengMDPI AGDiagnostics2075-44182018-03-01812110.3390/diagnostics8010021diagnostics8010021Diagnosing Thoracic Outlet Syndrome: Current Approaches and Future DirectionsSebastian Povlsen0Bo Povlsen1King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Denmark Hill, London SE5 9RS, UKLondon Hand Clinic, London Bridge Hospital, London SE1 2PR, UKThe diagnosis of thoracic outlet syndrome (TOS) has long been a controversial and challenging one. Despite common presentations with pain in the neck and upper extremity, there are a host of presenting patterns that can vary within and between the subdivisions of neurogenic, venous, and arterial TOS. Furthermore, there is a plethora of differential diagnoses, from peripheral compressive neuropathies, to intrinsic shoulder pathologies, to pathologies at the cervical spine. Depending on the subdivision of TOS suspected, diagnostic investigations are currently of varying importance, necessitating high dependence on good history taking and clinical examination. Investigations may add weight to a diagnosis suspected on clinical grounds and suggest an optimal management strategy, but in this changing field new developments may alter the role that diagnostic investigations play. In this article, we set out to summarise the diagnostic approach in cases of suspected TOS, including the importance of history taking, clinical examination, and the role of investigations at present, and highlight the developments in this field with respect to all subtypes. In the future, we hope that novel diagnostics may be able to stratify patients according to the exact compressive mechanism and thereby suggest more specific treatments and interventions.http://www.mdpi.com/2075-4418/8/1/21thoracic outlet syndromeneurogenicvenousarterialdiagnosisclinicalneurographydiffusion tensor imagingultrasounddynamic CT angiography
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sebastian Povlsen
Bo Povlsen
spellingShingle Sebastian Povlsen
Bo Povlsen
Diagnosing Thoracic Outlet Syndrome: Current Approaches and Future Directions
Diagnostics
thoracic outlet syndrome
neurogenic
venous
arterial
diagnosis
clinical
neurography
diffusion tensor imaging
ultrasound
dynamic CT angiography
author_facet Sebastian Povlsen
Bo Povlsen
author_sort Sebastian Povlsen
title Diagnosing Thoracic Outlet Syndrome: Current Approaches and Future Directions
title_short Diagnosing Thoracic Outlet Syndrome: Current Approaches and Future Directions
title_full Diagnosing Thoracic Outlet Syndrome: Current Approaches and Future Directions
title_fullStr Diagnosing Thoracic Outlet Syndrome: Current Approaches and Future Directions
title_full_unstemmed Diagnosing Thoracic Outlet Syndrome: Current Approaches and Future Directions
title_sort diagnosing thoracic outlet syndrome: current approaches and future directions
publisher MDPI AG
series Diagnostics
issn 2075-4418
publishDate 2018-03-01
description The diagnosis of thoracic outlet syndrome (TOS) has long been a controversial and challenging one. Despite common presentations with pain in the neck and upper extremity, there are a host of presenting patterns that can vary within and between the subdivisions of neurogenic, venous, and arterial TOS. Furthermore, there is a plethora of differential diagnoses, from peripheral compressive neuropathies, to intrinsic shoulder pathologies, to pathologies at the cervical spine. Depending on the subdivision of TOS suspected, diagnostic investigations are currently of varying importance, necessitating high dependence on good history taking and clinical examination. Investigations may add weight to a diagnosis suspected on clinical grounds and suggest an optimal management strategy, but in this changing field new developments may alter the role that diagnostic investigations play. In this article, we set out to summarise the diagnostic approach in cases of suspected TOS, including the importance of history taking, clinical examination, and the role of investigations at present, and highlight the developments in this field with respect to all subtypes. In the future, we hope that novel diagnostics may be able to stratify patients according to the exact compressive mechanism and thereby suggest more specific treatments and interventions.
topic thoracic outlet syndrome
neurogenic
venous
arterial
diagnosis
clinical
neurography
diffusion tensor imaging
ultrasound
dynamic CT angiography
url http://www.mdpi.com/2075-4418/8/1/21
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