Ncv Spinal Acessory Nerve And Long Thoracic Nerve

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Ncv Spinal Acessory Nerve And Long Thoracic Nerve
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Ncv Spinal Acessory Nerve And Long Thoracic Nerve, in Visit Clinic

Measures speed and strength of electrical signals in two shoulder-related nerves to detect nerve injury or dysfunction 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 Ncv Spinal Acessory Nerve And Long Thoracic Nerve Test in Visit Clinic?

This test measures how fast and how well electrical signals travel along two specific nerves: the spinal accessory nerve and the long thoracic nerve. These nerves control shoulder and upper back muscles. Checking their function is important after injury, surgery, or when people have unexplained shoulder weakness. The test helps find nerve damage, pinching, or ongoing nerve disease. Doctors use the results to locate the problem, decide if further tests are needed, guide treatment, and monitor recovery over time.

Ncv Spinal Acessory Nerve And Long Thoracic Nerve Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

No special preparation is required.

Ncv Spinal Acessory Nerve And Long Thoracic Nerve Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The Ncv Spinal Acessory Nerve And Long Thoracic Nerve test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a Ncv Spinal Acessory Nerve And Long Thoracic Nerve Test in Visit Clinic?

NCV SPINAL ACESSORY NERVE AND LONG THORACIC NERVE is usually done as part of electrodiagnostic testing or a nerve conduction study panel. Doctors order it for shoulder weakness, winged shoulder blade, pain after injury, or unexplained muscle loss. It helps diagnose nerve injury, compression, or neuropathy and guides treatment and rehabilitation. Abnormal results can come from trauma, surgery, compression, inflammation, metabolic disease, or certain medications, and a family history of neuropathy may make testing more relevant.

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Frequently asked questions

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What is another name for the long thoracic nerve in Visit Clinic?plus

Another name for the long thoracic nerve is the "nerve to serratus anterior"; it’s also historically called Bell’s nerve (nerve of Bell). It typically arises from C5–C7 roots of the brachial plexus and supplies the serratus anterior muscle, which is crucial for scapular protraction and preventing winging of the scapula.

What is the difference between a long thoracic nerve injury and an accessory nerve injury in Visit Clinic?plus

The long thoracic nerve innervates serratus anterior; injury causes medial scapular winging, difficulty pushing or with overhead abduction, often after trauma or mastectomy. The spinal accessory nerve supplies trapezius (and SCM); injury produces shoulder droop, lateral winging, impaired scapular elevation and abduction above horizontal, and weak shoulder shrug—commonly after posterior-triangle surgery. Both are motor-only lesions without sensory loss.

Are spinal accessory and accessory nerves the same in Visit Clinic?plus

Yes — the terms "spinal accessory nerve" and "accessory nerve" generally refer to the same cranial nerve (CN XI). It mainly comprises spinal roots that innervate the sternocleidomastoid and trapezius muscles, enabling head rotation and shoulder elevation. Some texts describe an additional small cranial root often linked with the vagus nerve, but clinically CN XI usually denotes the spinal accessory component.

What is another name for the spinal accessory nerve in Visit Clinic?plus

The spinal accessory nerve is also commonly called the accessory nerve or cranial nerve XI (CN XI). It has a spinal root from upper cervical segments and a cranial part; it primarily innervates the sternocleidomastoid and trapezius muscles, enabling head rotation, shoulder elevation, and some swallowing actions. Injury can cause weakness of shoulder shrug and head turning.

What is the treatment for long thoracic nerve damage in Visit Clinic?plus

Treatment begins with conservative care: pain control, activity modification and targeted physiotherapy for scapular stabilization and serratus anterior strengthening; many recover in six to twelve months. If no improvement, electrodiagnostic testing guides surgery such as nerve repair, grafting or transfer, tendon transfers (e.g., pectoralis major) or scapulothoracic fusion for persistent winging. Botulinum toxin to antagonist muscles can provide symptom relief.

What happens if thoracic nerves are damaged in Visit Clinic?plus

Damage to thoracic nerves can cause localized or radiating pain, burning or sharp sensations, numbness and tingling, and muscle weakness or atrophy in the chest and upper abdomen. Intercostal nerve injury may impair chest wall movement and breathing, increase risk of chronic pain, and cause sensory loss across dermatomes. Severe lesions can affect autonomic fibers, causing sweating or circulation changes.