What is Dermatomal distribution?

Dermatomal distribution involves an area of skin supplied with sensory innervation by a particular nerve root. Dermatomal distributions do not cross the midline of the body.

What is Dermatomal level?

A dermatome is an area of skin that is mainly supplied by a single spinal nerve. There are 8 cervical nerves (note C1 has with no dermatome), 12 thoracic nerves, 5 lumbar nerves and 5 sacral nerves. Each of these spinal nerves relay sensation from a particular region of the skin to the brain.

What is non dermatomal distribution?

For a pain pattern to be deemed dermatomal, the pain must be contained within the area designated in the reference sources as arising from the nerve root involved. If all or part of the pain pattern fell outside the area designated by both reference sources for the involved nerve root, it was designated non-dermatomal.

What is non Dermatomal distribution?

What is a dermatome map?

Dermatome maps show the sensory distribution of each dermatome across the body. Clinicians can use test touch with a dermatome map as a way to localise lesions, damage, injury to specific spinal nerves, and to determine the extent of the injury, for example, if a patient is experiencing numbness in only one area.

What are Dermatomal sensory changes?

A dermatome is an area of skin supplied by a particular spinal nerve. Dermatomes may exhibit sensory changes for light touch and pin prick. Test each dermatome individually, on the unaffected and then the affected side.

What is a dermatome map used for?

Spinal nerves help to relay information from other parts of your body to your central nervous system. As such, each dermatome transmits sensory details from a particular area of skin back to your brain. Dermatomes can be helpful in evaluating and diagnosing conditions affecting the spine or nerve roots.

What is the clinical importance of dermatomes?

Dermatomes are useful to help localize neurologic levels, particularly in radiculopathy. Effacement or encroachment of a spinal nerve may or may not exhibit symptoms in the dermatomic area covered by the compressed nerve roots in addition to weakness, or deep tendon reflex loss.

Does radicular pain follow a dermatomal pattern?

Conclusion: In most cases nerve root pain should not be expected to follow along a specific dermatome, and a dermatomal distribution of pain is not a useful historical factor in the diagnosis of radicular pain. The possible exception to this is the S1 nerve root, in which the pain does commonly follow the S1 dermatome.