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Retrospective cohort describes Parsonage-Turner syndrome presentation and recovery in 42 patientsThe Shoulder Pain Many Doctors Miss for Weeks

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Key Takeaway
Consider Parsonage-Turner syndrome in patients with shoulder pain and specific nerve dysfunction patterns.

A retrospective cohort study analyzed 42 patients diagnosed with Parsonage-Turner syndrome (PTS) at a hand surgery center in Guangxi, China. The cohort had an average age of 41.1 years and was predominantly male (27 males, 15 females). The study reported an average annual incidence of 47 cases per 100,000 individuals. The average time from symptom onset to diagnosis was 60 days. The most frequent initial symptom was spontaneous pain (69%), and the most common affected area was the shoulder girdle (72%). The suprascapular nerve (52%), long thoracic nerve (50%), and axillary nerve (38%) were most frequently involved. Seven patients underwent surgery. Over an average follow-up of 54.8 months, 18 patients achieved complete recovery and 13 achieved partial recovery (MRC Grade 4), with most achieving effective recovery within two years. However, 21 patients experienced chronic pain. Safety and tolerability data were not reported. Key limitations include the retrospective design, single-center setting, and exclusion of 5 patients due to incomplete data. The intervention or exposure, comparator, and primary outcome were not specified. The study's practice relevance is limited to enhancing clinical awareness of PTS presentation, particularly for patterns involving the suprascapular and long thoracic nerves, to aid in early diagnosis. The findings are descriptive and cannot establish causality or generalize to other populations.

The pain that shows up overnight

It can start with nothing. No injury. No obvious cause. One day you are fine. The next, a deep, burning pain grips your shoulder. Sleep becomes impossible.

Then, as the pain eases, something stranger happens. The arm or shoulder feels weak. Lifting a cup gets harder. The shoulder blade may stick out oddly.

This is the pattern of Parsonage-Turner syndrome, also called idiopathic brachial plexitis. It is rare enough that many doctors have never seen it. But when it strikes, it can be life-altering.

New research suggests Parsonage-Turner syndrome is more common than doctors once thought. It is being diagnosed more often, partly as specialists learn to recognize it.

The problem is speed. Most patients bounce between clinics, therapists, and imaging tests before someone names the condition. By the time they reach the right specialist, nerve damage may already be serious.

Old view vs. sharper view

For a long time, sudden shoulder pain with weakness was attributed to muscle strain, pinched nerves in the neck, or rotator cuff injuries. Those are common. Parsonage-Turner syndrome is not.

But the combination of specific nerves being affected should trigger suspicion. This new retrospective study from China adds to the push for earlier recognition.

How it works, in plain English

Your shoulder is controlled by a bundle of nerves called the brachial plexus. Think of it as the wiring panel for the arm. Each branch sends signals to a specific muscle.

In Parsonage-Turner syndrome, the immune system mysteriously attacks some of those branches. Certain nerves get inflamed. Their wiring stops working properly. Muscles they control weaken.

Nobody fully understands why this happens. Triggers may include recent infections, vaccinations, surgery, or strenuous activity, though many cases have no clear trigger at all.

The study snapshot

Researchers reviewed the records of 42 patients with Parsonage-Turner syndrome treated at a hand surgery center in Guangxi, China, between late 2017 and late 2022.

They collected information about how patients first presented, which nerves were affected, what tests were done, and how patients recovered over an average follow-up of nearly 5 years.

Here's what they found

The yearly rate of Parsonage-Turner cases at this center was 47 per 100,000 individuals. That is higher than older estimates, again pointing to under-recognition.

On average, it took 60 days from symptom onset to diagnosis. That is two months of missed time for a condition where early treatment may improve outcomes.

The condition hit men more than women (27 vs. 15). Average age was 41. The right or dominant arm was affected more often. Spontaneous pain was the first symptom in 69 percent of cases. The shoulder girdle was involved in 72 percent.

The nerves most commonly affected were:

  • Suprascapular nerve (52 percent)
  • Long thoracic nerve (50 percent)
  • Axillary nerve (38 percent)

Seven patients needed surgery after nonsurgical care failed to help.

But here is the catch.

Recovery is often slow and incomplete. Of the 42 patients, 18 achieved full recovery and 13 recovered partially. But 21 still had chronic pain.

That is a large share left with long-term problems. Even with treatment, Parsonage-Turner syndrome can leave a lasting mark.

How the researchers read it

The authors argue that earlier recognition is the key lever for improving outcomes. They highlight specific combinations of nerve involvement that should raise suspicion, especially the suprascapular nerve plus the long thoracic nerve, or isolated posterior interosseous nerve issues.

When severe shoulder pain comes without a clear cause and is followed by weakness, Parsonage-Turner should be on the list.

If you or someone you know develops sudden severe shoulder or upper arm pain, especially without an obvious injury, keep notes of every symptom. If the pain eases but weakness follows, push for a neurology or hand surgery referral.

Imaging like MRI can help identify affected nerves. Nerve conduction studies and electromyography can confirm the pattern.

Early physical therapy can help maintain mobility while the condition runs its course. Some patients benefit from corticosteroids or immunotherapy. Surgery is reserved for cases that do not improve.

The limits

This was a retrospective study from a single center in China. Patterns could differ in other populations or healthcare settings.

The sample size of 42 is small. That limits how confidently specific rates and percentages translate to the general population.

Follow-up was long (nearly 5 years on average), but not all patients had complete data through every time point.

Larger multi-center studies would help define the true incidence of Parsonage-Turner syndrome and clarify best treatment approaches. Research into possible triggers, including autoimmune factors and viral infections, continues.

For now, the strongest message is for clinicians. A patient with sudden, severe, unexplained shoulder pain followed by weakness deserves immediate attention, not two months of delays.

Study Details

Study typeCohort
EvidenceLevel 3
PublishedApr 2026
View Original Abstract ↓
IntroductionParsonage-Turner syndrome (PTS) is a rare peripheral neuropathy with variable clinical manifestations. Its true incidence is higher than previously recognized, characterized by a prolonged recovery period, potential residual disability and limb pain, which poses a persistent challenge for clinic.MethodsForty-seven patients with PTS were admitted to our hospital’s hand surgery center between November 2017 and November 2022, 42 of whom were included in the retrospective study, with the exception of 5 patients whose data were incomplete. Demographic information, clinical data, and auxiliary examination results were collected, and all patients were regularly followed up. Outcomes were evaluated via the Medical Research Council (MRC) muscle strength grading scale and visual analogue scale (VAS) pain score. SPSS 22.0 software was used for statistical analysis.ResultsThe annual incidence of PTS was 47 per 100,000 individuals. The 42 patients, 27 males and 15 females, had an average age of 41.1 ± 20.3 years. The average period between onset and diagnosis was 60 days, and the right or dominant limb was more commonly affected. The most frequent initial symptom was spontaneous pain (69%), with the majority of cases affecting the shoulder girdle (72%). The suprascapular nerve (52%), long thoracic nerve (50%), and axillary nerve (38%) were the most frequently affected nerves. Seven individuals underwent surgery because of failure to respond or poor recovery after at least 3 months of nonsurgical treatment. The average follow-up time was 54.8 ± 15.0 months. Most patients achieved effective recovery within two years, with 18 attaining complete recovery and 13 achieving partial recovery (MRC Grade 4). Twenty-one patients experienced chronic pain.ConclusionThe frequency of PTS in hand surgery center is relatively high, and the epidemiological patterns are similar to those reported in previous studies. However, the majority of patients experience untimely treatment, which results in residual pain and inadequate motor function recovery. Enhancing clinical awareness of PTS for early diagnosis should be prioritized, particularly in cases of suprascapular nerve dysfunction combined with long thoracic nerve dysfunction or isolated posterior interosseous nerve dysfunction following spontaneous pain.
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