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S180. A comparative study of motor nerves conduction velocity between right handed and left handed subjects

Motor Nerve conduction study is one of the electrophysiological tests performed to evaluate electrical conduction of motor nerves. Many studies involved nerve conduction velocity of peripheral nerves, but only few addressed this issue in relation to handedness with lots of controversies in their res...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Clinical neurophysiology 2018-05, Vol.129, p.e209-e209
Main Authors: Ahmed, Duaa A., Mousa, Sarah Y., Ahmed, Ammar, Musa, Afraa
Format: Article
Language:English
Online Access:Get full text
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Summary:Motor Nerve conduction study is one of the electrophysiological tests performed to evaluate electrical conduction of motor nerves. Many studies involved nerve conduction velocity of peripheral nerves, but only few addressed this issue in relation to handedness with lots of controversies in their results. This Study was conducted to compare motor nerve conduction velocity between right-handed and left-handed subjects in large sample size. The study was carried as analytical cross-sectional study at the department of physiology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Khartoum and involved 120 healthy students from the medical campus, of whom 60 were right-handed and 60 were left-handed. Nerve conduction studies were performed using Medelec-Synergy machine. Two peripheral motor nerves of the upper limb (Median & Ulnar nerves) were investigated in each subject of the two groups bilaterally. The study revealed no significant difference in motor nerve conduction velocities of the investigated motor nerves (right-median, left-Median, right-ulnar & left-ulnar nerves) between the right-handed and the left-handed groups (P value > 0.05). Also when testing each group separately, no significant difference was found in motor nerve conduction velocities of the motor nerves (median, ulnar) between the right and left sides of the same subject, (P value > 0.05). The study concluded that there is no significant difference in nerve conduction velocity between right-handed and left-handed subjects. Same finding was found between right and left sides of the same subject, in both right-handed and left-handed groups. This proved that nerve conduction velocity has no relation with handedness.
ISSN:1388-2457
1872-8952
DOI:10.1016/j.clinph.2018.04.540