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Denervation and reinnervation in congenital brachial palsy

✍ Scribed by Heidi Scarfone; Alan J. McComas; Karen Pape; Rebecca Newberry


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
159 KB
Volume
22
Category
Article
ISSN
0148-639X

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✦ Synopsis


Motor unit number estimation (MUNE) was shown to be useful in assessing the neurophysiological status of 18 subjects with congenital brachial palsy. This was especially so since conventional M-wave measurements may give misleading impressions as to the extent of motor axon regeneration. In most subjects the involvement of sensory nerve fibers indicated that the traumatic lesions included postganglionic segments of the fibers, with or without preganglionic damage. In a minority the lesions were purely preganglionic. Digital sensory nerve involvement was more in a mediolateral direction, consistent with greater damage to the uppermost elements in the brachial plexus. In 5 individuals, MUNE and sensory testing showed that there had been trauma to the supposedly unaffected arm. Discrepancies between sensory and motor results suggested that reinnervation of the biceps brachii muscle was greater than that of the intrinsic muscles of the hand. In one subject examined serially, reinnervation of the hand muscles was detected by 10 months and continued in the hypothenar muscles for the next 6 years.


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