2003
DOI: 10.3171/jns.2003.98.5.1005
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Outcomes of surgery in 1019 brachial plexus lesions treated at Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center

Abstract: Surgical exploration and repair of brachial plexus lesions is technically feasible and favorable outcomes can be achieved if patients are thoroughly evaluated and appropriately selected.

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Cited by 213 publications
(162 citation statements)
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“…20 Patients with peripheral nerve tumors usually present with pain and paresthesias or with a palpable mass. 11,20,25,29 In our series, the most common presenting symptoms were palpable mass, numbness/paresthesias, pain, and weakness, symptomatology in agreement with that in the LSUHSC series. 20,29 Most often, early in the course, minimal neurological deficit will be present or there will be none at all.…”
Section: Epidemiology and Presenting Symptomssupporting
confidence: 71%
“…20 Patients with peripheral nerve tumors usually present with pain and paresthesias or with a palpable mass. 11,20,25,29 In our series, the most common presenting symptoms were palpable mass, numbness/paresthesias, pain, and weakness, symptomatology in agreement with that in the LSUHSC series. 20,29 Most often, early in the course, minimal neurological deficit will be present or there will be none at all.…”
Section: Epidemiology and Presenting Symptomssupporting
confidence: 71%
“…Reconstruction using nerve grafts was performed for cases of extra-foraminal rupture, and nerve transfers were employed for cases nerve root avulsion. The strategy of surgery for open sharp injuries and gunshot wounds objected to restore the continuity of the injured nerve; for closed injuries associated to traction, the strategy included restoration of the following functions, in order of priority: [1] elbow flexion; [2] shoulder abduction; [3] elbow extension; [4] finger flexion; [5] protective sensory recovery on the fingers.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the types of lesion associated to trauma of the brachial plexus encompass a number of different clinical aspects, sustaining different degrees of severity 3,4 . To date, there is no standardized surgical protocol determining the best treatment to be offered to patients sustaining brachial plexus injuries, and the operative strategy is mainly based on the surgeon's own experience 5 .…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many outcome studies of nerve-injured patients present motor and sensory functional outcomes but do not report information regarding the absence or presence of pain [1,7,16,17,30,35,36,38,41,44]. In the surgical literature, many studies that report pain in nerve-injured patients generally use unidimensional measures (verbal ratings or visual analog scales of pain intensity) and do not include assessment of the psychosocial factors that may be associated with pain [5,8,28,32,34,40,42].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%