MSK Growth, Injury and Repair – Nerve Flashcards

1
Q

What is the nature different types of nerve injury?

A

Compression (at different possible levels).

Trauma – direct (blow, laceration) or indirect (avulsion, traction) – neurapraxia, axonotmesis, neurotmesis.

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2
Q

What does compression involve and what are some example conditions?

A

Nerve entrapment. Classical conditions: Carpal tunnel syndrome – median nerve at wrist; Sciatica – spinal root by IV disc; Morton’s neuroma – digital nerve in 2nd / 3rd web space of forefoot.

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3
Q

Describe Neurapraxia injury and its prognosis

A
Nerve in continuity. Stretched (8% will damage microcirculation) or bruised. Reversible conduction block – local ischaemia and demyelination.
Prognosis good (weeks or months; mild).
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4
Q

Describe Axonotmesis injury and its prognosis

A
Endometrium intact (tube in continuity), but disruption of axons; more severe injury. Stretched ++ (15% elongation disrupts axons) or crushed or direct blow. Wallerian degeneration follows. 
Prognosis fair (sensory recovery often better than motor; not normal but sufficient)
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5
Q

Describe Neurotmesis injury and its prognosis

A

Complete nerve division. Laceration or avulsion. No recovery unless repaired (by direct suturing or grafting). Endoneural tubes disrupted so high chance of “miswiring” during regeneration.
Prognosis poor.

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6
Q

What are closed nerve injuries associated with?

A

Associated with nerve injuries in continuity – neuropraxias, axonotmesis.

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7
Q

Describe the outcome and surgical indication for closed nerve injuries

A

Spontaneous recovery possible.
Surgery indicated after 3 months if no recovery identified, monitored clinically + electromyography.
Axonal growth rate (1-3mm/day)

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8
Q

What are examples of closed nerve injuries?

A

Typically stretching of nerve – brachial plexus injuries; radial nerve injury – humeral fracture.

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9
Q

What are open nerve injuries associated with?

A

Frequently related to nerve division – neurotmetic injuries, e.g. knives/glass.

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10
Q

Describe the treatment of open nerve injuries and result of the nerve after its injury

A

Treated with early surgery.

Distal portion of the nerve undergoes Wallerian degeneration – occurs up to 2 to 3 weeks after the injury.

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11
Q

What is Wallerian degeneration?

A

Active process of degeneration that results when a nerve fibre is cut/crushed and the part of the axon distal to the injury degenerates.

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12
Q

What are the different clinical features associated with nerve injury?

A

Sensory – dysaesthesiae (disordered sensation), anaesthesia, hypo and hyperaesthesia, paraesthesia
Motor – paresis (weakness) or paralysis +/- wasting, dry skin – sweat glands not stimulated
Reflexes – diminished or absent

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13
Q

Describe the process of nerve healing

A

Very slow. Starts with initial death of axons distal to site of injury – Wallerian degeneration, then degradation of myelin sheath.
Proximal axon budding occurs after about 4 days.
Regeneration proceeds at rate of about 1mm/day, possibly 3-5mm/day in children. Pain is first modality to return.

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14
Q

What does the prognosis for nerve recovery depend on?

A

Whether nerve is “pure” (only sensory or only motor) or “mixed” (both sensory and motor), how distal the lesion is (proximal lesions are worse).

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15
Q

What can be used to monitor recovery?

A

Tinnel’s sign can monitor recovery (tap over site of nerve and paraesthesia will be felt as far distally as regeneration has progressed).
Injury can be assessed, and recovery monitored by electrophysiological Nerve Conduction Studies.

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16
Q

Describe use of direct nerve repair

A

For lacerations, no loss of nerve tissue. Using microscope/loupes, bundle repair, growth factors.

17
Q

Describe use of nerve grafting repair

A

For nerve loss. Late repair: retraction, sural nerve.

18
Q

Describe the rule of three with regards to surgery

A

Surgical timing in a traumatic peripheral nerve injury:

  • Immediate surgery within 3 days for clean and sharp injuries
  • Early surgery within 3 weeks for blunt/contusion injuries
  • Delayed surgery performed after 3 months, for closed injuries.
19
Q

Illustrate the difference between UMN and LMN lesions with regards to: strength, tone, deep tendon reflexes, clonus, Babinski’s sign (toe fanning), atrophy.

A

UMN lesion: strength decreased, tone increased, reflexes increased, clonus present, Babinski’s sign present, atrophy absent
LMN lesion: strength decreased, tone decreased, reflexes decreased, clonus absent, Babinski’s sign absent, atropy present