Brachial Plexus Injury Flashcards

1
Q

What is brachial plexus injury?

A

an injury to one or more of the spinal nerves in the UE

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2
Q

OBPI

A

obstetrical brachial plexus injury

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3
Q

Erb’s Palsy

A

○ Most common BPI
○ Involves damage to the spinal nerve C5 to C6 and possibly C7

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4
Q

Erb’s palsy results in

A

Paralysis or weakness in the shoulder muscles, the elbow flexors, and the forearm
supinators (waiter’s tip)

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5
Q

Klumpke’s Palsy

A

Avulsion of the lower spinal roots, C8-T1, pure lower root injuries are rare

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6
Q

Klumpke’s palsy results in:

A

■ Weakness of triceps, forearm pronators, and wrist flexors
■ “Claw-like” paralysis of the hand
■ Horner’s syndrome may be present

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7
Q

Erb-Klumpke

A

○ second most common OBPI ○ injury to the complete plexus – C5-T1

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8
Q

Erb-Klumpke Results in:

A

■ Total sensory and motor deficits of the entire upper extremity
■ Flail, paralyzed, areflexic arm with no sensation

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9
Q

Prevalence

A
  • vertex presentation with shoulder dystocia accounts for most OBPI cases
  • R > L
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10
Q

Etiology

A

● Shoulder dystocia
● Large birth weight
● Breech delivery
● Diabetes in pregnancy
● Maternal small stature/small pelvis
● Prolonged second stage of labor
● Multiple fetuses
● Use of forceps/vacuum to deliver

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11
Q

Types of BPI - Avulsion

A

Complete tear at proximal root

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12
Q

Types of BPI - Rupture

A

more distal on the nerve

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13
Q

Types of BPI - neuroma

A

scar tissue

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14
Q

types of BPI - Neuropraxia or stretch

A

just stretched
good recovery

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15
Q

Pathophysiology

A

● OBPI results from excessive lateral traction on the head away from the shoulder during
delivery
● Spontaneous recovery occurs with remyelination and reinnervation of sensory
receptors and/or muscle endplates
● Neonate more susceptible to nerve injury than older child

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16
Q

Narakas Classification - Group 1

A

C5,6: paralysis of shoulder, absent elbow flexion – spontaneous recovery in >80%.

17
Q

Narakas Classification - Group 2

A

C5,6,7: As above with wrist drop – good hand, good shoulder and elbow in 60%

18
Q

Narakas Classification - Group 3

A

All: complete paralysis – good hand in most, good shoulder and elbow in 30–50%

19
Q

Narakas Classification - Group 4

A

All: complete paralysis, Horner sign, limb atonic – full recovery very unlikely

20
Q

Diagnosis

A

● Typically first noticed by nurse or neonatologist
● Neonate should be examined in supine: movements, primitive reflexes, sensory, function, face and scalp presentation, respiratory status
● Confirmed through diagnostic tests

21
Q

Diagnostic Tests

A

● X-rays – clavicle and humerus
● Ultrasound
● EMG/NCS – 4 weeks of age
● CT scan with contrast-older child
● MRI – older child

22
Q

PT Examination

A
  • AROM/PROM
  • Strength and motor function
  • sensation: sensory grading system
  • Development: symmetry of reflexes
23
Q

Strength and motor function testing

A
  • toronto active movement scale
  • Mallet’s Classification of function
  • Raimondi score for hand function
24
Q

Sensory grading system for children with BPI

A

S0 – no reaction to painful or other stimuli
S1 – reaction to painful stimuli, none to touch
S2 – reaction to touch, not to light touch
S3 – apparently normal sensation

25
Q

Recovery

A

● Recovery may be noted within a few days.
● In most cases, some degree of spontaneous recovery occurs within 1 month.
● Evidence of full recovery may not appear for up to 3 months

26
Q

Immediate treatment

A
  • protect joints and surrounding ligaments
  • maintenance of PROM of affected joints (after 1 wk and before 3 wks)
  • Positioning
  • comfort management for pain due to nerve sheath edema and hemorrhage
27
Q

Protecting the joints

A

hold arm across abdomen to prevent from dangling, do not pick up under axilla

28
Q

Positioning

A

use blanket rolls to support affected arm in a swing or car seat, reposition regularly to prevent asymmetry. AVOID SWADDLING

29
Q

Affect on development

A

● Symmetry
● Bilateral UE use
● Posture
● Movement/mobility= participation and fxn

30
Q

Interventions - Acute phase

A
  • SENSORY STIMULATION
  • no stretching!
    -support extremity
  • gentle range of motion
  • positioning
31
Q

Long term PT treatment

A

● Exercise
● NMES
● Kinesiotape
● Splinting: hand splints, theratogs, etc.
● Biofeedback
● Surgery

32
Q

Prognosis

A

● Majority resolve over the first 3-4 months
● May continue to recover hand function 3-4 years
● 5%-25% have life long disability