MRI SCAN NEUROGRAPHY FOR LUMBAR PLEXUS

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MRI SCAN NEUROGRAPHY FOR LUMBAR PLEXUS
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MRI SCAN NEUROGRAPHY FOR LUMBAR PLEXUS, in Visit Clinic

An imaging scan that creates detailed pictures of the lumbar plexus nerves to find injury, compression, or disease in Visit Clinic.

centreCentre Visit
SAMPLE TYPE
Tissue
FASTING REQUIRED
No
GENDER
Male/Female
GET REPORTS IN
24 hours
TEST INCLUDED
1
Customers
20K+Customers
Labs
CertifiedLabs
Rating
4.5+Rating
Accuracy
ProvenAccuracy

What is a MRI SCAN NEUROGRAPHY FOR LUMBAR PLEXUS Test in Visit Clinic?

MRI neurography is an advanced imaging scan that creates clear pictures of the lumbar plexus nerves and nearby tissues. It shows nerve structure, swelling, inflammation, and areas of compression or scarring. This matters because these nerves control sensation and movement in the lower back, hips, and legs. The scan helps detect nerve root compression, plexopathy, traumatic injury, tumors, and inflammatory or metabolic neuropathies. Doctors use it to pinpoint the problem, plan treatments like physical therapy, injections, or surgery, and monitor recovery. Contrast dye may be used in some cases to improve visibility. Scans usually take 30 to 60 minutes.

MRI SCAN NEUROGRAPHY FOR LUMBAR PLEXUS Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

No special preparation is required.

MRI SCAN NEUROGRAPHY FOR LUMBAR PLEXUS Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The MRI SCAN NEUROGRAPHY FOR LUMBAR PLEXUS test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a MRI SCAN NEUROGRAPHY FOR LUMBAR PLEXUS Test in Visit Clinic?

MRI SCAN NEUROGRAPHY FOR LUMBAR PLEXUS is often ordered alone as a targeted imaging study when patients have persistent lower back, hip, or leg pain, numbness, or weakness. Doctors use it to locate nerve compression, plexus injury, inflammation, tumors, or post-traumatic changes and to guide surgery or injections. Abnormal findings can come from disc herniation, trauma, diabetes, tumors, or chronic inflammation; family history of neuropathy may increase need.

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Frequently asked questions

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What are the indications for lumbar plexus MRI in Visit Clinic?plus

Lumbar plexus MRI is indicated for suspected plexopathy or radiculopathy with unexplained lower‑limb neuropathic pain, weakness or sensory loss; evaluation of masses (neoplasm, metastasis, neurogenic tumors including plexiform neurofibromas); traumatic injury or entrapment; infectious or inflammatory plexus disorders; persistent sciatica with normal spinal imaging; unexplained postoperative or radiation‑related deficits; and preoperative mapping for complex lumbar/pelvic surgery.

How long does a lumbar plexus MRI take in Visit Clinic?plus

A lumbar plexus MRI usually takes about 30–60 minutes. A basic lumbar-spine MRI can be done in 20–45 minutes, while dedicated MR neurography of the lumbosacral plexus or studies requiring contrast and extra sequences may take up to 60–90 minutes. Allow extra time for registration, positioning and any IV contrast preparation.

What is the difference between MRI and MRI neurography in Visit Clinic?plus

MRI is a general imaging method that produces detailed pictures of organs, bones, joints and soft tissues. MR neurography is a specialized MRI protocol optimized to visualize peripheral nerves: it uses high-resolution, fat-suppressed and nerve-focused sequences (often diffusion-based) to detect nerve inflammation, entrapment, injury or tumors. In short, MRI shows broad anatomy; MR neurography concentrates on nerve structure and pathology.

What is the role of magnetic resonance neurography in assessment of lumbosacral radiculoplexopathy correlation with electrophysiological studiesplus

Magnetic resonance neurography (MRN) provides high‑resolution imaging of lumbosacral nerve roots and plexus, revealing nerve enlargement, signal changes, inflammation, compression, or structural lesions. Correlating MRN with electrophysiology (EMG/NCS) combines anatomical visualization with functional assessment of conduction and denervation, improving localization, diagnostic accuracy, chronicity assessment, and guiding treatment (medical, surgical, or biopsy), especially when electrodiagnostic results are inconclusive.

What is the purpose of the lumbar plexus in Visit Clinic?plus

The lumbar plexus is a network of nerve fibers formed by the anterior rami of L1–L4 (often with T12) within the psoas major. It provides motor and sensory innervation to the lower abdomen, groin, anterior and medial thigh—via major branches like the femoral and obturator nerves—enabling hip flexion, knee extension, thigh adduction and cutaneous sensation in these regions.

What does MR neurography show in Visit Clinic?plus

MR neurography visualizes peripheral nerves and their course, showing nerve anatomy, caliber, and signal changes (e.g., T2 hyperintensity) that indicate inflammation, edema, entrapment, compression, trauma, neuroma, or tumor. It detects denervation changes in adjacent muscles, nerve continuity or discontinuity, scarring and fibrosis, and relationships with surrounding soft tissues and masses—helping localize lesions and guide diagnosis or surgical planning.