2021
DOI: 10.7759/cureus.15180
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Pseudo-Anterior Interosseus Nerve Syndrome: A Case Report and a Review of Clinical Signs, Pathology and Functional Anatomy of the Precision Grip

Abstract: Precision grip, a prehensile function of humans, is exacted through the action of the median nerve and its main tributary, the anterior interosseus nerve (AIN). In the forearm, the AIN can be subject to nerve entrapment by tendinous and fibrous arches or accessory and variant muscles. It is also vulnerable to trauma of the upper arm and forearm. To the neurologist, an isolated neuritis or an immune-mediated medial cord or lower trunk brachial plexopathy (Parsonage-Turner syndrome) is the usual mode of presenta… Show more

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“…Precision hand movements were primarily controlled by the median nerve, which was often referred to as the "precision nerve". Besides, grip force was mainly governed by the ulnar nerve, known as the "power nerve" [48]. Previous studies about hand-related EEG decoding did not take the impact of grasp taxonomy into account.…”
Section: A Single Trial Classificationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Precision hand movements were primarily controlled by the median nerve, which was often referred to as the "precision nerve". Besides, grip force was mainly governed by the ulnar nerve, known as the "power nerve" [48]. Previous studies about hand-related EEG decoding did not take the impact of grasp taxonomy into account.…”
Section: A Single Trial Classificationmentioning
confidence: 99%