Psychiatry & Neurology | Pain Medicine Questions Numbness

Is a nerve conduction test painful?

I'm 30 and been having numbness in my left hand and fingers. My doctor recommended a nerve conduction test. Is it painful?

3 Answers

In most cases no, if no complications occur or are present.
No. The nerve conduction requires small electric shocks to measure function of the nerves.
Have a question aboutNumbness?Ask a doctor now
It's always difficult to reliably predict someone else's experience of discomfort. That said, I would describe the nerve conduction (NC) test as merely trivially annoying or minimally uncomfortable, not painful. It involves delivery of brief small-current shocks to peripheral nerves in order to elicit and record both motor and sensory responses. Most instruments used for NC studies can deliver a maximum current (DC) of 0.1 Ampere, which is quite small, yet would feel like a fairly good "jolt" when delivered to an individual nerve. Almost all shocks used in testing are considerably smaller than this, however. Some patients find that it helps to take a dose of 400-800mg of ibuprofen before the test. Having performed thousands of these tests, I've found that almost all patients tolerate them quite easily.