نتایج جستجو برای: brachial plexus nerve blocks

تعداد نتایج: 257490  

2013
Jörg Bahm

We present two children with a diagnosis of upper limb arthrogryposis and report on findings about brachial plexus exploration and a nerve transfer procedure to reanimate elbow flexion. Although the etiology of arthrogryposis multiplex congenita remains unknown and multifactorial, it can be worthful to explore the brachial plexus in the affected upper limb and to perform selective motor nerve t...

2014
Hyun Jung Kim Sang Hyun Park Hye Young Shin Yun Suk Choi

Brachial plexus injury is a potential complication of a brachial plexus block or vessel puncture. It results from direct needle trauma, neurotoxicity of injection agents and hematoma formation. The neurological presentation may range from minor transient pain to severe sensory disturbance or motor loss with poor recovery. The management includes conservative treatment and surgical exploration. ...

Journal: :European review for medical and pharmacological sciences 1999
A Forte L S Gallinaro A Bertagni G Montesano V Prece G Illuminati

Neurinomas, also referred to as neurilemmomas and schwannomas, are rare benign tumours of the peripheral nerves, a low proportion of which arise from the brachial plexus. Authors report a case of an ancient schwannoma arising from the brachial plexus. The tumour, usually asymptomatic, may cause sensory radicular symptoms, or rarely motor deficits in the involved arm. Enucleation of the tumour f...

Journal: :Neurosurgery clinics of North America 2009
Bassam M J Addas Rajiv Midha

Nerve transfers are becoming used increasingly for repair of severe nerve injures, especially brachial plexus injuries, where the proximal spinal nerve roots have been avulsed from the spinal cord. The procedure essentially involves the coaptation of a proximal foreign (donor) nerve to the distal denervated (recipient) nerve, so that the latter's end-organs will be reinnervated by the donated a...

2003
Julia Martínez Xavier Sala - Blanch Gregory A. Liguori Richard L. Kahn Michael A. Gordon

To the Editor:—We read with interest the recent report by Martinez et al. regarding a combined infraclavicular plexus blockade with suprascapular nerve block for humeral head surgery in a patient with severe respiratory failure. However, we have some concerns with regard to the following points: First, it is not clearly stated whether the authors performed an infraclavicular plexus block using ...

Journal: :Frontiers in surgery 2016
Shirley M. Potter Scott I. Ferris

We describe the clinical outcome of a novel nerve transfer to restore active shoulder motion in upper brachial plexus injury. The thoracodorsal nerve (TDN) was successfully used as a vascularized donor nerve to neurotize to the suprascapular nerve (SSN) in a patient with limited donor nerve availability. At 4 years follow-up, he had regained useful external rotation of the injured limb, with no...

Journal: :The Laryngoscope 2012
Adam Luginbuhl Daniel M Schwartz Anthony K Sestokas David Cognetti Edmund Pribitkin

OBJECTIVES/HYPOTHESIS Continuous intraoperative neuromonitoring (IONM) of transcranial electric motor evoked potentials (tceMEPs) and somatosensory evoked potentials (SSEPs) has gained universal acceptance as an efficacious method for detecting emerging positional brachial plexopathy or peripheral nerve compression during spinal and shoulder surgery. This has implications for transaxillary thyr...

2008
Jörg Bahm Claudia Ocampo-Pavez

We present 4 children between 6 and 13 years suffering from severe sequelae after a total obstetric brachial plexus lesion resulting in a hand without functional active long finger flexion. They had successfully reanimated long finger flexion using a free functional gracilis muscle transfer. These children initially presented a total obstetric brachial plexus palsy without neurotisation of the ...

2012
Jaegyok Song

A 69-year-old man with prostate cancer underwent surgery for 16 h. Approximately 6 h after surgery, the patient developed severe pain and motor weakness in his right arm. After neurologic examinations that included a nerve conduction study and electromyography, the patient was diagnosed with a brachial plexus injury. The causes of the brachial plexus injury were thought to be abduction of both ...

Journal: :The Australian journal of physiotherapy 2008
Andrew Stone Michele Sterling

The Brachial Plexus Provocation Test (BPPT) (or Upper Limb Tension Test) is used by clinicians to assess mechanical sensitivity of peripheral nerve tissue in the upper quadrant. The BPPT as developed by Elvey (1979) is performed in the following sequence: gentle shoulder depression, glenohumeral abduction to 90° and external rotation in the coronal plane, forearm supination and wrist and finger...

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