Abstract
The diagnosis of Neurogenic Thoracic Outlet Syndrome (NTOS) is often considered in patients presenting with neck, shoulder, and arm pain, sensory disturbance and weakness especially when these complaints are worsened when assuming certain postures or when performing activities such as reaching overhead. The label of NTOS should be considered when it explains a patient’s suffering and disability; it is important for the clinician to differentiate ubiquitous complaints of innocuous positional numbness from those features of a condition that really are responsible for the patient’s disability. The main goal of the clinician is to determine for whom NTOS targeted therapy would lead to both alleviation of suffering and improve functional impairment.
The task of making the diagnosis and finding patients who may benefit from NTOS targeted treatment starts with the discovery of certain positive features which suggest NTOS; the present chapter outlines this initial step in the diagnostic process. Conditions may mimic NTOS or may be comorbid with it having dramatic effects upon treatment outcomes; these conditions are discussed in Chap. 8.
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Jordan, S.E. (2013). Clinical Presentation of Patients with NTOS. In: Illig, K., Thompson, R., Freischlag, J., Donahue, D., Jordan, S., Edgelow, P. (eds) Thoracic Outlet Syndrome. Springer, London. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4471-4366-6_7
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