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Brachial plexus examination is described in a simple manner for this difficult topic. A drawing of the brachial plexus is included, which is essential knowledge for learning to examine the brachial plexus. The system is: look, feel, move.
Inspection includes looking for Horner’s syndrome, which may indicate a preganglionic lesion. Palpation is for the presence of the pulse, sweating and the sensory testing. Motor testing is in a sequential manner whereby the examiner tests the myotomes, the muscles supplied by the branches off the roots, the muscles supplied by the branches off the trunks, the muscles supplied by the branches off the cords and then the terminal branches of the brachial plexus.
Included in the chapter is a section on how clinical examination findings influence treatment and also a section on the obstetric brachial plexus.
Neuromuscular diseases include disorders of anterior horn cells, anterior and posterior roots, plexus, peripheral nerves, neuromuscular junctions, and muscles. Detailed history and physical examination most often provide reliable information to localize the neuromuscular disorder. Motor neuron diseases have in common the dysfunction of the superior or inferior motor neuron. Immune myasthenia gravis is caused by autoantibodies interfering with the normal neuromuscular transmission. Most myopathies are slowly progressing diseases involving predominantly proximal muscles. Corticosteroids are the first-line immunosuppressive treatment in most chronic immune-mediated neuromuscular diseases. Neurological disorders may cause respiratory failure by impairing pulmonary ventilation. For normal ventilation to occur, multiple central and peripheral nervous system structures need to be intact. Respiratory management of neuromuscular respiratory failure requires differentiating between slowly developing conditions in which respiratory failure occurs as an exacerbation of a chronic condition, and rapidly progressive diseases.
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