Support United Brachial Plexus Network on Facebook

If brachial plexus awareness is a cause you care about, you can now show your support and raise awareness on Facebook. The United Brachial Plexus Network is one of many causes Facebook users can support, and the group currently has about 200 members.

Facebook users who join the cause can participate in discussions, connect with others who are trying to raise awareness, follow UBPN fundraising goals, and even make donations. It’s also possible to share your cause with others.

There’s also an Erb’s Palsy Awareness cause on Facebook, which has become one of the world’s most popular social networking sites with more than 150 million users across the globe.

If you have a Facebook account, you may want to check out these and other causes you’d like to support. You can also find us on Facebook here.

 

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"New" Erbs Palsy Surgery

"New" because it's a surgery that has been around for years but only recently has been used for children.  The surgery involves reconnecting broken nerves to healthy ones.  Now repair can be done on young people before the injuries get to a point of no possible repair. 

Ella Woodruff is a three-year old who suffered an injury that left her left arm paralyzed and broke a bone in her neck.  Today she is almost back to normal because of this  surgery that was done at St. Louis Children's Hospital.

Dr. Susan Mackinnon, chief of the division of plastic and reconstructive surgery at Washington University's School of Medicine, summed up the results: "Spectacular. That's the adjective I would use."

Because of Ella's response to the surgery, physicians are holding high hope that the procedure could be used on children as young as three months.  They think that Ella's great response is due to her age and that her developing body was able to cooperate better with the surgery.

Erb's Palsy is an injury to the brachial plexus, a cluster of nerves that connects the arm and hands to the brain.  The injury often occurs during childbirth when the baby's shoulder gets stuck in the birth canal and too  much force is used in trying to free the baby.  The severity of the nerve damage determines whether healing occurs naturally or whether surgery could be used.

The old surgical method involved grafting a healthy nerve from some area of the body to the damaged nerve.  Ella's physician Dr. Gregory Borschel, a pediatric plastic surgeon with Children's Hospital, has said that this method has downsides such as leaving a part of the body numb since it has no nerve connection.  The recovery is also much slower.
 

"We did something called a nerve transfer, often a better option in pediatrics," he said. "Think of it as a bypass."

During a six-hour microsurgery, he cut the crushed nerve that exchanged messages between Ella's hand, arm, shoulder and brain and reconnected it to a healthy, redundant nerve — one that didn't have much to do.
 

As for Ella's recovery, "It was almost like nothing had happened," Borschel said. "Based on how rapid her recovery has been … she will likely max out our measurement scale."
 

 

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Brachial Plexus Injury Awareness Week

The United Brachial Plexus Network, Inc. (UBPN) and its Awareness Committee have announced that the 9th annual Brachial Plexus Injury Awareness Week will be celebrated from October 19th through October 26th, 2008.  The goal of the week long activity is to increase general awareness regarding brachial plexus injuries: traumatic injuries that can result in full to partial paralysis of one or both arms.

The brachial plexus is an arrangement of nerve fibres, running from the spine proceeding through the neck, the axilla (armpit region) and into the arm.  Injury to these nerves can result in a paralysis of the arm called Erb's Palsy which is almost always caused during birth. 

The most common cause of Erb's Palsy is dystocia which is an abnormal or difficult childbirth or labor.  The nerve injury  happens when too much force is used in the delivery trying to free a baby that is stuck in the birth canal.   When the baby's shoulder gets stuck behind the mother's pubic bone it is called shoulder dystocia.  However, there are several maneuvers and techniques that can be safely used to free the baby's shoulder thus avoiding damage to the brachial plexus nerves.

If the delivery is not handled correctly, the resulting nerve damage may result in varying degrees of weakness or paralysis of the shoulder, arm and hand.  The amount of paralysis will depend on which nerves in the plexus( network ) are injured.  In some cases the resulting paralysis could be permanent and in others the weakness or paralysis may be minor enough to resolve itself over time. 

This is where we see malpractice cases arise. It is often when communication in the delivery room breaks down, warning signs are missed or people aren't familiar enough with the maneuvers.
 

 

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