A 34-year-old member asked:

How can i treat a brachial plexus injury?

1 doctor answer1 doctor weighed in
Dr. Michael McGonigal
General Surgery 41 years experience
Wait for healing: Most brachial plexus injuries from car or motorcycle crashes involve stretching the nerves. Although they are not usually completely torn apart, they can take a long time to heal. In some cases, they do not heal at all. You can see a neurologist, and nerve conduction studies can be performed to document recovery.
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.

Similar questions

A 33-year-old member asked:

What's a natural way to treat brachial plexus injuries?

2 doctor answers4 doctors weighed in
Dr. Edward Evans
Neonatology 20 years experience
Physical therapy: A physical therapist can suggest a series of exercises to help recover from nerve damage, however much of the recovery is just time for healing.
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
A 42-year-old member asked:

What are the tests for brachial plexus injury?

1 doctor answer1 doctor weighed in
Dr. Frank Holmes
Sports Medicine 25 years experience
EMG/NCS: Electromyography combined with a nerve conduction study is the standard of care test for a brachial plexus injury. However, the test may not abnormal unless the injury occurred 2-3 weeks or more prior to the test. An MRI can detect more severe brachial plexus injuries. Of course, no test is a substitute for a good history and physical exam.
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
CA
A 25-year-old member asked:

So what are the symptoms of brachial plexus injuries?

2 doctor answers4 doctors weighed in
Dr. Julian Bragg
Neurology 19 years experience
Pain and weakness: Brachial plexus injuries typically present with pain or weakness in the shoulder or arm on the affected side. It is a very complicated piece of anatomy, but by seeing what parts of the limb are affected (and possibly doing electrical testing) a neurologist can often narrow down the specific are of plexus involved.
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
A 35-year-old member asked:

What is a brachial plexus injury like?

1 doctor answer2 doctors weighed in
Dr. Nikolaos Zacharias
Maternal-Fetal Medicine 28 years experience
Arm paralysis.: Brachial plexus injuries (usually congenital) are serious morbid conditions resulting from trauma on the nerves travelling from the neck to the arm. They cause permanent paralysis of the affected arm. Physical therapy can help. Fortunately, this complication occurs very rarely even in cases of shoulder dystocia; its overall incidence is 0.04 to 0.2% of live births.
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
A 32-year-old member asked:

Are brachial plexus injuries hereditary?

2 doctor answers4 doctors weighed in
Dr. Vasu Brown
Integrative Medicine 23 years experience
Child birth injury: Brachial plexus injury can be caused during child birth - if there is birthing difficulty.
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.

Related questions

A 44-year-old member asked:
How can increase strength for brachial plexus injury?
1 doctor answer1 doctor weighed in
A 49-year-old member asked:
What are good ways to boost strength for brachial plexus injury?
2 doctor answers4 doctors weighed in
A 41-year-old member asked:
My little brother has brachial plexus injury. What could cause it?
1 doctor answer3 doctors weighed in
A 54-year-old male asked:
Advise on how long my injury should take to heal. Brachial plexus irritation?
1 doctor answer1 doctor weighed in
A 37-year-old member asked:
How to increase healing for brachial plexus injury?
1 doctor answer4 doctors weighed in
Last updated Dec 18, 2020

People also asked

Connect with a U.S. board-certified doctor by text or video anytime, anywhere.
$44 video appointments with $19/month membership*
*Billed $57 every 3 months. Cancel anytime.

Disclaimer:

Content on HealthTap (including answers) should not be used for medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and interactions on HealthTap do not create a doctor-patient relationship. Never disregard or delay professional medical advice in person because of anything on HealthTap. Call your doctor or 911 if you think you may have a medical emergency.