17- EVALUATION OF PERIPHERAL NERVE INJURIES AROUND ELBOW IN ASSOCIATION WITH FRACTURES

Alaa A Dawood# & Ali Hamzaa* #MB,ChB, FICMS, Orthopaedic Surgeon, Lecturer, Dept. Of Surgery, College of Medicine, University of Basrah. *MB,ChB, Orthopaedic Surgeon, Basrah General Hospital, Basrah, IRAQ. Abstract In this prospective study, 147 cases of trauma around elbow were examined and eva...

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Main Authors: Ali Hamzaa, Alaa A Dawood
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: university of basrah 2011-06-01
Series:Basrah Journal of Surgery
Subjects:
Online Access:https://bjsrg.uobasrah.edu.iq/article_55140_c98f0f9b3449dc96d8cd9b2371aff434.pdf
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spelling doaj-a03fd8c8983e437eb773566e5a0653592020-11-25T03:21:58Zenguniversity of basrahBasrah Journal of Surgery1683-35892409-501X2011-06-011710010.33762/bsurg.2011.551405514017- EVALUATION OF PERIPHERAL NERVE INJURIES AROUND ELBOW IN ASSOCIATION WITH FRACTURESAli HamzaaAlaa A DawoodAlaa A Dawood# & Ali Hamzaa* #MB,ChB, FICMS, Orthopaedic Surgeon, Lecturer, Dept. Of Surgery, College of Medicine, University of Basrah. *MB,ChB, Orthopaedic Surgeon, Basrah General Hospital, Basrah, IRAQ. Abstract In this prospective study, 147 cases of trauma around elbow were examined and evaluated. All were unilateral. Only 22 were associated with peripheral nerve injuries (14.9%). Males were 19 (86%) and females were 3 (14%). Their ages were between 5 and 54 years (mean 24 years). The radial nerve was found to be most vulnerable to injury (40.9%) followed by ulnar nerve (31.8%) and lastly the median nerve (9.1%). The injurious agents in 2 patients were bullet and missile while in 20 were civilian causes. In thirteen cases (59.1%) there were primary nerve palsy and in 9 (40.9%) there were secondary nerve palsies. The degree of nerve injury in 13 patients were neuropraxia (59.1%) with complete recovery, in 6 were neurotmesis (27.3%) and in 3 were axonotmesis (13.6%). The full recovery of the nerve was in 13 patients (59.1%), 12 of them by spontaneous recovery (54.5%) and one of them by surgical exploration and neurolysis (4.5%).Timing of nerve recovery were variable, range from 1.5 to 8 months. There was no recovery in 9 patients (40.9%). We concluded that when closed fractures are complicated by primary nerve deficits, waiting for spontaneous re-innervation seems reasonable up to eight months and early surgical exploration is better to be avoided, conversely if closed fracture complicated by secondary nerve palsy early exploration of nerve is favored except in Tourniquet palsies.https://bjsrg.uobasrah.edu.iq/article_55140_c98f0f9b3449dc96d8cd9b2371aff434.pdfperipheral nerveelbowfractures
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ali Hamzaa
Alaa A Dawood
spellingShingle Ali Hamzaa
Alaa A Dawood
17- EVALUATION OF PERIPHERAL NERVE INJURIES AROUND ELBOW IN ASSOCIATION WITH FRACTURES
Basrah Journal of Surgery
peripheral nerve
elbow
fractures
author_facet Ali Hamzaa
Alaa A Dawood
author_sort Ali Hamzaa
title 17- EVALUATION OF PERIPHERAL NERVE INJURIES AROUND ELBOW IN ASSOCIATION WITH FRACTURES
title_short 17- EVALUATION OF PERIPHERAL NERVE INJURIES AROUND ELBOW IN ASSOCIATION WITH FRACTURES
title_full 17- EVALUATION OF PERIPHERAL NERVE INJURIES AROUND ELBOW IN ASSOCIATION WITH FRACTURES
title_fullStr 17- EVALUATION OF PERIPHERAL NERVE INJURIES AROUND ELBOW IN ASSOCIATION WITH FRACTURES
title_full_unstemmed 17- EVALUATION OF PERIPHERAL NERVE INJURIES AROUND ELBOW IN ASSOCIATION WITH FRACTURES
title_sort 17- evaluation of peripheral nerve injuries around elbow in association with fractures
publisher university of basrah
series Basrah Journal of Surgery
issn 1683-3589
2409-501X
publishDate 2011-06-01
description Alaa A Dawood# & Ali Hamzaa* #MB,ChB, FICMS, Orthopaedic Surgeon, Lecturer, Dept. Of Surgery, College of Medicine, University of Basrah. *MB,ChB, Orthopaedic Surgeon, Basrah General Hospital, Basrah, IRAQ. Abstract In this prospective study, 147 cases of trauma around elbow were examined and evaluated. All were unilateral. Only 22 were associated with peripheral nerve injuries (14.9%). Males were 19 (86%) and females were 3 (14%). Their ages were between 5 and 54 years (mean 24 years). The radial nerve was found to be most vulnerable to injury (40.9%) followed by ulnar nerve (31.8%) and lastly the median nerve (9.1%). The injurious agents in 2 patients were bullet and missile while in 20 were civilian causes. In thirteen cases (59.1%) there were primary nerve palsy and in 9 (40.9%) there were secondary nerve palsies. The degree of nerve injury in 13 patients were neuropraxia (59.1%) with complete recovery, in 6 were neurotmesis (27.3%) and in 3 were axonotmesis (13.6%). The full recovery of the nerve was in 13 patients (59.1%), 12 of them by spontaneous recovery (54.5%) and one of them by surgical exploration and neurolysis (4.5%).Timing of nerve recovery were variable, range from 1.5 to 8 months. There was no recovery in 9 patients (40.9%). We concluded that when closed fractures are complicated by primary nerve deficits, waiting for spontaneous re-innervation seems reasonable up to eight months and early surgical exploration is better to be avoided, conversely if closed fracture complicated by secondary nerve palsy early exploration of nerve is favored except in Tourniquet palsies.
topic peripheral nerve
elbow
fractures
url https://bjsrg.uobasrah.edu.iq/article_55140_c98f0f9b3449dc96d8cd9b2371aff434.pdf
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