palsy and risk factors
Types of nerve injuries
impairments
Scales
Treatments
100

In erbs palsy what nerve roots are affected and what would we see

C5-C6, occasionally C7 

Adduction, pronation of forearm, flexion of the wrist "tipping the waiter" 

100

Neurotmesis is what type of nerve injury

its an avulsion nerve injury where the nerve completely rips off of the spinal cord

100

What are the components involved in neuroplasticity?

attention, sensory input, skilled activity/task, increased difficulty, variation

100

Modified Mallet Classification what is a grade 1 and a grade 5 

grade 1= no funciton

grade 5= normal function

100

for infants how long should we wait to start working on ROM? What should we avoid for the first 4 weeks?

wait 1-2 weeks after birth 

avoid ROM greater than 90 degrees for 4 weeks 

200

what nerve roots are damaged in a Klumpkes palsy? What is the presentation

C8-T1

severe limb atrophy and "claw-like" hand 

200

what type of nerve injury is neuropraxia?

It is a stretch injury to the nerve

200

what are some shoulder impairments? 

what is the scapulothoracic rhythm and its impairment?

factors to consider: persistent muscle imbalance, habitual posturing, shoulder subluxation/dislocation, impaired scapulothoracic rhythm 

the scapula and humerus move in a 1:2 ratio with the arm abducted to 180 degrees; 60 degrees occur by rotation of the scapula and 120 degrees by rotation of the humerus. an impairment is for use of the scapula to assist with arm elevation 

200

what is the SHEAR scale and what is the grading scale 

SHEAR deformity- scapular hypoplasia, elevation, and rotation 

grading scale 1-5, 5 being the worst 

200

why might we use botox for children

for muscle imbalance especially for the overactive muscles

300

what nerve roots are affects in global palsy and what could we see

C5-T1 

we may see flaccid arm 

300

what type of nerve injury is Axonotmesis?

This is either a full or partial rupture of the nerve 

300

what are associated injuries with brachial plexus

phrenic nerve injury

facial palsy

SCI

clavicle fracture

horners syndrome

300

what is the active movement scale?

what is the grading scale for gravity minimized and against gravity?

to look at active movement for a child with brachial plexus injuries

gravity minimized 0-4

against gravity 5,6,7

300

what are the goals for surgeries 

restore movement

restore alignment: scapula, humerus, Ilizarov 

400

what are some risk factors for a brachial plexus injury?

high birth weight (>4000 grams)

fetal position

breech delivery 

maternal diabetes 

disparity between maternal pelvic size and fetal size

400

what type of nerve injury is a neuroma?

inflammation of the nerve causing expansion of a certain area in the nerve 

400

what could be some injuries of brachial plexus without shoulder dystocia 

uterine tumors 

tumors in the neck of the baby 

viral disease

other abnormalities 

breech position (feet coming out first) 

400

what is a grade III for the following movements:

abduction

global ER

hand on spine 

hand to neck

hand to mouth 

IR 

abduction: 30-90 degrees

global ER: 0-20 degrees 

hand on spine: S1

hand to mouth: partial trumpet sign

IR:can touch with wrist flexion

400

why might we do muscle transfer surgery 

helps to release tight muscles 

500

what are the delivery modes and shoulder dystocia 

Babys shoulder gets stuck behind the mother's pubic bone during delivery; a vacuum, force or the medical team (traction injury) can occur 

500

what is the nerve injury recovery? 

what is important for the first 2 years and in early physical therapy

it is a SLOW process

first 2 years: protect joint alignment and soft tissue 

early physical therapy: develop appropriate motor patterns, decrease developmental apraxia (learned non-use secondary to neurological damage) 

500

what are some medical assessments we can use? 

electrophysiological study

MRI

X-RAY/CT scan

ultrasound

500

what would a grade 3 indicate on the active movement scale

in a gravity minimized position where the patient can through >1/2 available passive range 

500

what are some protocols for muscle transfer surgery

maintaining scapular stability while building ER in both adduction and abduction

PROM followed by the facilitation of active movement of ERs and abductors progress to strengthening

IR and adduction is discouraged

compensations not allowed 

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