| Spontaneous Recovery |
Spontaneous Recovery Rates | |||
| Timing of Recovery | ||||
| Muscle Strength as an Indicator of Recovery | ||||
The majority of patients
with brachial plexus
injury recover spontaneously and have little residual arm weakness. Therefore, surgical
intervention is not considered until it is clear that an infant will not recover
completely on its own.
The reported rates
of spontaneous recovery vary widely, ranging from 60% to 90%. Some infants, however,
fail to regain full strength in the arm and have significant lifelong disabilities.![]()
Studies have shown
that almost 60% of infants make spontaneous recovery by 2 months of age, and by 4
months, that number increases to around 75%. After the age of 4 months, however,
the rate of spontaneous recovery decreases greatly (to about 4%, when assessed at
the age of one year), so that the chance of further improvement is small.![]()
The speed at which muscle strength is regained helps determine the extent of the injury. In general, the more rapid the recovery of muscle strength, the less severe the injury. If a complete recovery is to occur, it does so within 2-3 months.
An infant with persistent
arm weakness showing little or no improvement probably has severe total brachial
plexus palsy. Detached nerve root (nerve root avulsion
), extensive nerve fiber
injury (axonotmesis
),
or ruptured
brachial plexus (neurotmesis
) should be suspected. The
chance of spontaneous recovery is very small in such cases, and thus surgical
intervention should be considered.