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https://read.qxmd.com/read/8134425/the-natural-history-of-obstetrical-brachial-plexus-palsy
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
B J Michelow, H M Clarke, C G Curtis, R M Zuker, Y Seifu, D F Andrews
Obstetrical brachial plexus palsy remains an unfortunate consequence of difficult childbirth. Sixty-six such patients were reviewed. Included were 28 patients (42 percent) with upper plexus involvement and 38 (58 percent) with total plexopathy. The natural history of spontaneous recovery in all of these patients has been determined using an appropriate grading mechanism. Sixty-one patients (92 percent) recovered spontaneously and five patients (8 percent) required primary brachial plexus exploration and reconstruction (median age 12 months), demonstrating that most patients do well...
April 1994: Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
https://read.qxmd.com/read/7759926/klumpke-s-birth-palsy-does-it-really-exist
#22
REVIEW
M M al-Qattan, H M Clarke, C G Curtis
Erb's palsy is the most common obstetric brachial plexus injury followed by total plexus palsy. The distribution of Klumpke's birth palsy with modern obstetric practice is unknown. In this paper, we studied the distribution of Klumpke's birth palsy in our series of 235 consecutive cases of obstetrical brachial plexus injury and determined the incidence of this type of palsy to be 0.6% as cited in the English literature over the last decade.
February 1995: Journal of Hand Surgery: Journal of the British Society for Surgery of the Hand
https://read.qxmd.com/read/7706875/the-prognostic-value-of-concurrent-clavicular-fractures-in-newborns-with-obstetric-brachial-plexus-palsy
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
M M al-Qattan, H M Clarke, C G Curtis
This study investigates the prognostic value of concurrent clavicular fractures in newborn babies with obstetric brachial plexus palsy. The records of 183 consecutive newborn babies with brachial plexus birth injury from 1988 to 1993 were reviewed retrospectively. Poor outcome, specifically insufficient spontaneous return of motor function of the limb necessitating primary brachial plexus surgery, was assessed for infants both with and without concurrent clavicular fractures. 13 newborn babies had concurrent clavicular fractures, and of these two required primary brachial plexus surgery...
December 1994: Journal of Hand Surgery: Journal of the British Society for Surgery of the Hand
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