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Peripheral Nerve Injuries

Anatomy

  • Formed from spinal nerves
    • 31 pairs of spinal nerves
  • Peripheral nerves are mixed nerves – carry motor, sensory and autonomous innervation to the limbs
 Structure of peripheral nerve

  • An individual nerve fibre is enclosed in a collagen connective tissue called an endoneurium
  • A bundle of these nerve fibres are bound together by fibrous tissue (perineurium) to form a fasciculus
  • A number of fasciculi are bound together by a fibrous tissue sheath called an epineurium

Etiology

  • Fractures and dislocations – most common cause
  • Direct injury – cuts, lacerations
  • Infections – leprosy
  • Mechanical injury – compression, traction, friction
  • Frostbite, thermal injury
  • Toxic agents – tetracycline injection can cause radial nerve palsy
  • Radiation for cancer treatment

Classification – Seddon’s Classification

  • Classified injuries into 3 types

Neurapraxia

  • Physiological disruption of conduction in the nerve fibre
  • No structural change
  • No  Wallerian degeneration
  • Complete recovery occurs within a few weeks

Axonotmesis

  • Axons are damaged but the internal architecture of the nerve is preserved
  • Wallerian degeneration occurs
  • Recovery may be spontaneous but can take several months

Neurotmesis

  • Structure of the nerve is damaged by cutting or scarring of a segment
  • Wallerian degeneration occurs
  • Spontaneous recovery is not possible; nerve repair is required

Diagnosis

Attitude and deformity

  • Wrist drop – wrist remains in palmar flexion due to weakness of dorsiflexors (radial nerve palsy)
  • Foot drop – foot remains in plantar flexion due to weakness of dorsiflexors (common peroneal nerve palsy)
  • Claw hand – hyperextension at the MCP joint and flexion at the PIP and DIP joints, due to paralysis of the lumbricals (ulnar nerve palsy)
  • Ape thumb – thumb is in the same plane as the wrist (median nerve palsy)
  • Waiter’s tip – arm hangs by the side of the body with elbow extended and arm fully pronated (brachial plexus palsy – specially C5-C6)

Muscle wasting

  • Thenar eminence – median nerve
  • Hypothenar eminence – ulnar nerve
  • Hollowing between metacarpals – ulnar nerve
  • Thigh wasting – femoral nerve
  • Calf wasting – sciatic nerve

Skin

  • Becomes dry – there is lack of sweating due to involvement of sympathetic nerves
  • Pallor, cyanosis
  • Shiny, atrophic nails
  • Ulcers

Sensory examination – changes in sensations of touch, pain, temperature and vibration

Reflexes – decreased/absent reflexes

Motor examination of muscles

Nerve conduction studies

  • Electromyography – assesses function at the neuromuscular junction
  • Nerve conduction velocity – assesses large myelinated fibres

Treatment

  • Observation with EMG
  • Direct muscular neurotisation – for irreparable nerve ending at risk of forming neuroma
  • Surgical repair
  • Nerve grafting
  • Nerve transfer
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