| BRACHIAL
PLEXUS PALSY
Approximately 1 to 2 babies in 1,000 suffer
Brachial Plexus injuries at birth. Many are preventable injuries.
A Brachial Plexus injury is an injury to the
nerves that control muscles in the shoulder, arm, or hand. Any or
all of these muscles may be partially or fully paralyzed as a
result of the injury. The extent of your child's disability
depends on which nerves are injured and the severity of the
damage.
Possible symptoms of Brachial Plexus injuries
include:
• no muscle control and/or no
feeling in the arm or hand
• little control over the wrist and
hand.
• inability to use the shoulder or elbow
muscles
• a limp or paralyzed arm
There are 4 types of Brachial Plexus Injuries:
1. Neuropraxia or Stretch injuries that
range from mild neuropraxia with early recovery to complete
paralysis with no potential for recovery, depending on the amount
of stretching. The nerves will often be compressed from swelling
and bruising from the shoulder being caught.
2. Neuroma injuries involve scar tissue
(that has developed as the injure nerve has tried to heal itself)
compressing the nerves and preventing the nerve from conducting
signals to the muscles. This type of Brachial Plexus injury may
require surgery to restore function.
3. Rupture injuries involve the nerve
being torn at several locations (but not at the spinal attachment)
and require surgery and therapy to restore normal function.
4. Avulsion injuries are when the nerves
are pulled from the spinal cord. This is the most severe type of
Brachial Plexus injury and requires extensive surgery including a
possible muscle transfer to restore function.
Often the diagnosis is more complicated than one
of the four groups above. For example, sometimes many nerves in
the Brachial Plexus may be injured and the nerves may have
different types of injuries.
Although a Brachial Plexus injury can occur at
any time, most Brachial Plexus injuries happen during birth.
During the strain of childbirth, the shoulder of the baby can get
caught and stretched behind the Pubic Symphysis bone (part of the
Pelvis bone). If the shoulder is caught, the Brachial Plexus can
be compressed, stretched or torn.
Below are some examples of negligent care on the
part of doctors, nurses, and other health care providers that can
result in Brachial Plexus injuries:
• Failing
to properly estimate the weight of the baby.
• Failing
to determine that the baby's shoulders are too large to fit
through the birth canal.
• Applying
excessive lateral traction to the fetal neck during delivery.
If your son or daughter has a brachial plexus
injury and you suspect that the injury resulted because a doctor,
nurse, or other health care provider failed to provide adequate
care during the pregnancy, or during the labor and delivery of
your baby, you should immediately contact a competent lawyer. The
lawyer will be able to help you understand whether your son's or
daughter's brachial plexus injury was the result of a health care
provider's negligence, in which case the lawyer will also be able
to assist you in recovering compensation that can be used for your
child's care and education. |