Background: Brachial plexus birth injuries (BPBI) occur as a result of a difficult delivery. External rotation of shoulder (ER) is usually one of the last movements which may recover. There is no consensus about the predicting factors for spontaneous recovery or the optimal timing for surgical treatment of ER in BPBI patients. The aim of our retrospective study was to describe spontaneous recovery of active ER and evaluate predicting factors for the recovery.

Methods: We screened 562 patients and identified a consecutive cohort of 103 BPBI patients, who had no active ER at the age of 3 months. We systematically collected clinical data on recovery. In addition, we assessed whether early recovery of elbow flexion, shoulder abduction or Narakas grade at 1 month predicts ER recovery.

Results: Fifty-two (51%) patients spontaneously recovered ER, 44% of whom were recovered by the age of 1 year, 83% by 1.5 years, 92% by 2 years and 98% by 3 years. A breakpoint in the slope of the curve showing proportion of recovered patients occurred at 2 years of age. Recovery of active ER was significantly associated with early elbow flexion and Narakas grade at 1 month, but not with early active shoulder abduction.

Conclusions: Most spontaneous recovery of ER in patients with BPBI occurs until 2 years of age, which thus can be considered a meaningful follow-up period for spontaneous recovery of ER. This information should be considered when making decision about peripheral nerve transfer surgery to improve ER in BPBI.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/PRS.0000000000011877DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

spontaneous recovery
20
recovery active
12
active shoulder
8
external rotation
8
brachial plexus
8
plexus birth
8
predicting factors
8
bpbi patients
8
elbow flexion
8
narakas grade
8

Similar Publications

The effect of thermoelectric craniocerebral cooling device on protecting brain functions in post-cardiac arrest syndrome.

Front Cardiovasc Med

January 2025

Department of Anesthesiology and Reanimation, Faculty of Medicine, Bezmialem Vakif University, Istanbul, Türkiye.

Aim: This study aimed to protect brain functions in patients who experienced in-hospital cardiac arrest through the application of local cerebral hypothermia. By utilizing a specialized thermal hypothermia device, this approach sought to mitigate ischemic brain injury associated with post-cardiac arrest syndrome, enhance survival rates, and improve neurological outcomes as measured by standardized scales.

Methods: A prospective, single-center cohort study was conducted involving patients aged ≥18 years who experienced in-hospital cardiac arrest and achieved return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Reinforcement Learning is Impaired in the Sub-acute Post-stroke Period.

Neurorehabil Neural Repair

January 2025

Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA.

Background: In humans, most spontaneous recovery from motor impairment after stroke occurs in the first 3 months. Studies in animal models show higher responsiveness to training over a similar time-period. Both phenomena are often attributed to a milieu of heightened plasticity, which may share some mechanistic overlap with plasticity associated with normal motor learning.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background And Aim: Human dental pulp stem cells (hDPSCs) constitute a promising alternative for central nervous system (CNS) cell therapy. Unlike other human stem cells, hDPSCs can be differentiated, without genetic modification, to neural cells that secrete neuroprotective factors. However, a better understanding of their real capacity to give rise to functional neurons and integrate into synaptic networks is still needed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Sleep need accumulates during waking and dissipates during sleep to maintain sleep homeostasis (process S). Besides the regulation of daily (baseline) sleep amount, homeostatic sleep regulation commonly refers to the universal phenomenon that sleep deprivation (SD) causes an increase of sleep need, hence, the amount and intensity of subsequent recovery sleep. The central regulators and signaling pathways that govern the baseline and homeostatic sleep regulations in mammals remain unclear.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Spinal cord injury (SCI) remains a formidable challenge in biomedical research, as the silencing of intrinsic regenerative signals in most spinal neurons results in an inability to reestablish neural circuits. In this study, we found that neurons with low axonal regeneration after SCI showed decreased extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) phosphorylation levels. However, the expression of dual specificity phosphatase 26 (DUSP26)─which negatively regulates ERK phosphorylation─was reduced considerably in neurons undergoing spontaneous axonal regeneration.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!