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Journal Article

Citation

Kaiser R, Waldauf P, Haninec P. Acta Neurochir. (Wien) 2012; 154(7): 1293-1297.

Affiliation

Third Faculty of Medicine, Department of Neurosurgery, Hospital Kralovske Vinohrady, Charles University, Srobarova 50, 100 34, Prague, Czech Republic, radek.kaiser@fnkv.cz.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2012, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1007/s00701-012-1291-7

PMID

22302237

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Brachial plexus injuries occur in up to 5% of polytrauma cases involving motorcycle accidents and in approximately 4% of severe winter sports injuries. One of the criteria for a successful operative therapy is the type of lesion. Upper plexus palsy has the best prognosis, whereas lower plexus palsy is surgically untreatable. The aim of this study was to evaluate a group of patients with brachial plexus injury caused by traffic accidents, categorize the injuries according to type of accident, and look for correlations between type of palsy (injury) and specific accidents. METHODS: A total of 441 brachial plexus reconstruction patients from our department were evaluated retrospectively (1993 to 2011). Sex, age, neurological status, and the type and cause of injury were recorded for each case. Patients with BPI caused by a traffic accident were assessed in detail. RESULTS: Traffic accidents were the cause of brachial plexus injury in most cases (80.7%). The most common type of injury was avulsion of upper root(s) (45.7%) followed by rupture (28.2%), complete avulsion (16.9%) and avulsion of lower root(s) (9.2%). Of the patients, 73.9% had an upper, 22.7% had a complete and only 3.4% had a lower brachial plexus palsy. The main cause was motorcycle accidents (63.2%) followed by car accidents (23.5%), bicycle accidents (10.7%) and pedestrian collisions (3.1%) (p < 0.001). Patients involved in car accidents had a higher percentage of lower avulsion (22.7%) and a lower percentage of upper avulsion (29.3%), whereas cyclists had a higher percentage of upper avulsion (68.6%) based on the data from the entire group of patients (p < 0.001). Lower plexus palsy was significantly increased in patients after car accidents (9.3%, p < 0.05). In the two main groups (car and motorcycle accidents), significantly more upper and fewer lower palsies were present. In the bicycle accident group, upper palsy was the most common (89%). CONCLUSION: Study results indicate that the most common injury was an upper plexus palsy. It was characteristic of bicycle accidents, and significantly more common in car and motorcycle accidents. The results also indicate that it is important to consider the potential of a brachial plexus injury after serious traffic accidents and to examine both upper extremities in detail even if some motor function is preserved.


Language: en

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