Nerve
Injuries
Introduction
A nerve is like a cable wrapped in insulation. An outer layer
of tissue forms a cover to protect the nerve, just like the
insulation surrounding a cable. A nerve contains millions of
individual fibers grouped in bundles within the “insulated
cable.”
Nerves
serve as the “wires” of the body that carry information
to and from the brain. Motor nerves carry messages from the
brain to muscles to make the body move. Sensory nerves carry
messages to the brain from different parts of the body to signal
pain, pressure, and temperature. While the individual axon carries
only one type of message, either motor or sensory, most nerves
in the body are made up of both.
Injured Nerve
Nerves
are fragile and can be damaged by pressure, stretching, or cutting.
Pressure or stretching injuries can cause the fibers carrying
the information to break and stop the nerve from working, without
disrupting the insulating cover. When a nerve is cut, both the
nerve and the insulation are broken. Injury to a nerve can stop
the transmission of signals to and from the brain, preventing
muscles from working and causing loss of feeling in the area
supplied by that nerve.
When
nerve fibers are broken, the end of the fiber farthest from
the brain dies, while the insulation stays intact, leaving empty
tubes which used to carry the nerve fibers. The end that is
closest to the brain does not die, and after some time may begin
to heal. If the insulation was not cut, the nerve fibers may
grow down the empty tubes until reaching a muscle or sensory
receptor. If both the nerve and insulation have been cut and
the nerve is not fixed, the growing nerve fibers may grow into
a ball at the end of the cut, forming a nerve scar called a
‘neuroma’. A neuroma can be painful and cause an
electrical feeling when touched.
Treatment
To
fix a cut nerve, the insulation around both ends of the nerve
is sewn together. A nerve in a finger is only as thick as a
piece of thin spaghetti, so the stitches have to be very tiny
and thin. The repair may need to be protected with a splint
for the first three weeks to protect it from stretching apart
since it is so delicate. The goal in fixing the nerve is to
repair the outer cover so that nerve fibers can grow down the
empty tubes to the muscles and sensory receptors and work again.
The surgeon tries to line up the ends of the nerve repair so
that the fibers and empty tubes match up with each other as
best as possible, but with millions of fibers in the nerve.
If
a wound is dirty or crushed, your physician may wait to fix
the nerve until the skin has healed. If there is a gap between
the ends of the nerve, the doctor may need to take a piece of
nerve from another part of the body to fix the injured nerve.
This may cause permanent loss of feeling in the area where the
nerve graft was taken. Smaller gaps can sometimes be bridged
with “conduits” made from a vein or special cylinder.
Once
the nerve cover is fixed, the nerve fibers generally begin to
start growing across the repair site after three or four weeks.
The nerve fibers then usually grow down the empty nerve tubes
up to one inch every month, depending on the patient’s
age and other factors. This means that with an injury to a nerve
in the arm eleven or twelve inches above the fingertips, it
may take as long as a year before feeling returns to the fingertips.
Results Expectations
The
patient should be aware of several things while waiting for
the nerve to heal. Your doctor may recommend therapy to keep
joints flexible. If the joints become stiff, they will not work
even after muscles begin to work again.
When
a sensory nerve has been injured, the patient must be extra
careful not to burn or cut their fingers since there is no feeling
in the affected area. Your doctor will recommend the appropriate
therapy based on the nature of your injury.
Factors
that may affect results after nerve repair include age, the
type of wound and nerve, and location of the injury. While nerve
injuries may create lasting problems for the patient, care by
a physician and proper therapy help return to more normal use.
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