Nerve Lesions Flashcards
Cause of injury involving C5/C6 roots or superior trunk:
Most often due to excessive separation of head and shoulder during a fall, accident, or botched delivery, stab/bullet wound to the neck –> results in tearing or stretching of roots/trunk (Waiter’s tip)
Injury involving C5/C6 roots or superior trunk:
Waiter’s tip
Waiter’s tip (Erb-Duchenne’s palsy) loss of which muscle movements:
Flexion, abduction, and lateral rotation at the shoulder joint - upper limb hangs by the side in medial rotation
Muscles affected by Waiter’s tip (Erb-Duchenne’s palsy):
Deltoid, biceps, brachialis, brachioradialis, supraspinatous, teres major, subscapularis, infraspinatus, and teres minor (**infraspinatus and teres minor are chief lateral rotators of the upper limb) - all of these innervations come from C5 and C6 roots
Basically: all of the lateral rotators are out, so the medial rotators dominate and the shoulder is over rotated medially
Injury involving the posterior cord:
Wrist-drop
Cause of injury involving the posterior cord:
Due to poorly fitting crutches putting pressure on the radial nerve or “Saturday night palsy” when an intoxicated person hangs their arm over the back of a chair for extended periods of unconsciousness
Wrist-drop involves which nerve?
Radial nerve
Movements affected by Wrist-drop:
The person is unable to extend the forearm, hand or digits due to affected muscles innervated by the radial nerve
Can be accompanied by posterior hand numbness– superficial nerve of brachii
Injury involving the inferior trunk:
Ulnar nerve damage - Claw Hand
Cause of injury involving inferior trunk:
Results from sudden upward pulling of the upper limb, may also arise due to cervical rib or pulmonary carcinoma; the inferior trunk of the brachial plexus (C8/T1) is involved and usually affects ulnar nerve function (severe motor and sensory loss to hand)
Claw hand:
Resulting imbalance of flexion/extension which occurs at the MP and IP joints, in addition to being unable to abduct or adduct digits 2-5 (loss of interossei), the patient presents with hyperextended MP joints of digits 4-5 and somewhat flexed IP joints (loss of lumbricals 4-5) - patient has difficulty making a fist since the flexor digitorum profundus to digits 4-5 is affected
Long thoracic nerve damage:
Winged scapula: axillary trauma, pt. cannot hold scapula against thorax wall when asked to push against a wall, cannot fully abduct upper limb on affected side because scapula cannot be rotated
Musculocutaneous nerve damage:
If injured within the axilla, weakness of upper limb flexion and severe weakness of forearm flexion, weakness when supinating the forearm from a partially flexed position (biceps involved)
Upper Radial nerve damage:
Due to fractured humerus while in the radial groove - little loss of forearm extension but wrist drop does occur
Lower Radial nerve damage:
If lesioned at the neck of the radius (deep radial nerve), wrist drop is not as severe since extensor carpi radialis longus and brevis are spared but still have loss of digital extension of proximal phalanges and thumb impairments