1 / 15

Brachial Plexus Injuries

Brachial Plexus Injuries. Chapter 11 Athletic Injury Assessment. Clinical Anatomy p.371. Innervation for upper extremity Levels--fig.11-5, .371 C 5- T 1 nerve roots Upper trunk:C5-C6 Middle trunk: C7 Lower trunk: C8-T1. Brachial Plexus Pathology. “Burners” or “Stingers”

preston
Télécharger la présentation

Brachial Plexus Injuries

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Brachial Plexus Injuries • Chapter 11 • Athletic Injury Assessment

  2. Clinical Anatomyp.371 • Innervation for upper extremity • Levels--fig.11-5, .371 • C5-T1nerve roots • Upper trunk:C5-C6 • Middle trunk: C7 • Lower trunk: C8-T1

  3. Brachial Plexus Pathology • “Burners” or “Stingers” • Nerve stretch or compression • FB: more common in defensive players • Assess all dermatomes C5-T1 in assessment • Table 11-6, p. 386

  4. Brachial Plexus Pathology—p. 385 • Mechanisms: • acute onset • traction/stretch • compression • fig. 11-16, p. 385 • Symptoms: • burning/tingling in upper extremity • weakness in UE

  5. Brachial Plexus Pathology • Other considerations: • cervical spine injury • cervical stenosis • Rule out other injuries • No clearance until all symptoms resolve completely

  6. Brachial Plexus Pathologyp.387 • Assessment: • Brachial plexus traction test-- • p.387 • Box 11-5, p. 387 • 2 possible results • Possibly (+) Spurling test • Dermatome testing

  7. Brachial Plexus Myotomes • C5: shoulder abd./ER • C6: elbow flex.; wrist ext • C7: elbow ext.; wrist flex. • C8: finger flex. • T1: finger abd.

  8. Brachial Plexus Injury: Treatment • Remove from contact • Test/Retest • Rule out other pathologies • Bilateral weakness • Weakness outside brachial plexus (shoulder shrug)

  9. Brachial Plexus Injury: Return to Play Guidelines • Full painfree AROM in UE and neck • Normal sensation • Correction of technique/ equipment to prevent re-injury

  10. Cervical Stenosis • Signs/Symptoms: • recurrent stingers • bilateral complaints • proper technique • neurological signs outside of brachial plexus • transient quadriplegia • usually congenital problem

  11. Cervical Stenosis • Cervical spinal canal usu. 14.5mm-20mm(C3-C6) • CSF coats and cushions spinal cord • small canal or large cord may = stenosis • Medical imaging used to measure risk

  12. Cervical Stenosis: Assessment • Torg Ratios • VB=SC (+/- 20%)=NL • C4-C6 • original research did not include FB players • 1990--33% of NFL had stenosis • stenosis=ratio BUT • ratiostenosis • Imaging • x-ray (magnification) • CT Scan/MRI • Contrast CT • C-spine vs whole spine

  13. Cervical Stenosis: Management • Symptoms dictate workup • Imaging: • x-rays to determine Torg ratio • If Torg ration outside of NL ranges (.8-1.2) then CT/MRI • whole spine imaging?

  14. Cervical Stenosis: Management • Return to Play • Assess risks based on imaging/ratios • Assess possible technique changes • if stenotic-avoid all sports which threaten the C-spine

  15. Burners vs. Stenosis • Burners • One-sided • Acute • Strong cause-effect • Limited to brachial plexus only • Normal imaging • Normal Torg ratio • Stenosis • Bilateral • Chronic • Poor cause-effect • Extends beyond brachial plexus • Abnormal imaging • Abnormal Torg ratio

More Related