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 Brachial Plexus injury intervention

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عدد المساهمات : 9
العمر : 37
تاريخ التسجيل : 17/06/2009

Brachial Plexus injury intervention Empty
مُساهمةموضوع: Brachial Plexus injury intervention   Brachial Plexus injury intervention I_icon_minitimeالأحد 21 يونيو - 3:57

Brachial Plexus injury intervention 188743


Brachial Plexus injury intervention



Patient with a brachial plexus injury will usually present with arm internally rotated, abducted and wrist somewhat flex depending on level of lesion. Scapular winging is a common problem of all brachial plexus injuries due to impairment of the long thoracic nerve. Phrenic nerve damage can also occur in brachial plexus injury.





PROBLEMS :

- Shoulder or elbow dislocatio

- Frozen shoulder

- Soft tissue/joint contractures

- Do not lift child under armpit




TREATMENT :



Provide patient's parents with home program PROM sheets 2-3 daily x 10 reps in all motions

* Begin gentle PROM exercise in supine to increase joint flexibility and muscle tone


* Provide tactile stimulation to involved extremity using various textured materials, koosh balls, vibration and massage to increase sensory awareness of that extremity in overall body scheme


* Joint compression/weight bearing throughout involved extremity to increase- proprioceptive input/muscle contraction


* Active use of involved extremity using a variety of developmental appropriate activities to increase strength and coordination beginning in gravity eliminated then advance to against gravity


* Always include bimanual/bilateral motor planning activities

* Pool therapy

* Scapular stabilization to increase scapulo-humeral mobility


- if frozen shoulder or contractures are present, place hot pack on tightened musculature for 10-15 minutes followed by massage/myofascial release then resume passive stretching


Positioning/splinting :



to hold arm in supination and external rotation you may want to suggest to parent to place pillows or stuffed animals underneath armpit and alongside arm while patient is at rest or sleeping to provide a sustained stretch.



Do not hold arm in elbow flexion on top of chest by restraining it for long periods of time although placing arm while feeding or resting in this position is acceptable to not let arm dangle in space.



For a flaccid hand/wrist, a resting hand splint should be provided to maintain hand in a proper functional position and for protection secondary to deficits in sensory nerves.



A futuro wrist brace or neoprene thumbs abductor splint with synergy wrist extensor support/dycem may increase child's ability to weight bear on involved extremity.



For decreased wrist extension a dorsal cockup splint will increase active grasp of involved hand
For an elbow flexion contracture a 3 point elbow extension splint is made with an adjustable elbow extension pull.


An elbow conformer splint can also be used for a soft tissue contracture caused by the elbow flexors overpowering extensors. It is also beneficial to maintains the arm in extension for active reaching to strengthen deltoid or in weight bearing activities when the triceps are weak.


For no active elbow flexion but full extension a dynamic elbow flexion splint may be fabricated using rubber bands or theratube with thermo plastic or neoprene cuffs or hinges can be used also.


For thumb in palm after 3-4 months of age a Joe Cool splint to increase active thumb abduction and opposition is used.


Air Splints

May be used on involved extremity to allow for stability in elbow extension to bear weight on involved arm to crawl

May be used intermittently on uninvolved arm to immobilize it to allow involved arm to move actively with assistance

Precautions: watch for circulatory changes, numbness or swelling

Air splints can be ordered from Flaghouse or Sammons catalog for pediatric sizes



OBSERVATIONS/RECOMMENDATIONS :

Usually you will see first movement patterns at approximately 2-4 months of age which include:

- Shoulder elevation/depression or protraction/retraction

- Shoulder flexion 0-90 degrees using pectoral musculature Shoulder abduction 0-45 degrees using supraspinatus musculature

- Elbow flexion with forearm pronated bringing hand to mouth and/or hands to midline

- Finger flexion/extension with wrist in flexion then later with wrist in extension



Usually the last motions to return are:

- Full shoulder flexion/abduction using deltoid musculature

- Supination (children do not actively perform this motion until 11 months of age)

- External rotation

- Full elbow extension using triceps


Brachial Plexus injury intervention 188743
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Brachial Plexus injury intervention
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