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Neuropathies Main

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(Redirected from Nerve Injuries (Main))

Other Names

  • Neuropathies Main
  • Nerve Injury Main

Introduction


Terminology

Neurapraxia

  • Definition: Mildest form of nerve injury; a temporary conduction block without structural damage to the axon.
  • Pathophysiology: Myelin sheath may be damaged, but axon remains intact. No Wallerian degeneration.
  • Causes: Compression, mild traction, ischemia.
  • Symptoms:
    • Loss of motor function or sensation distal to injury
    • Usually transient, recovery occurs in days to weeks.
  • Recovery: Full recovery usually within weeks.

Axonotmesis

  • Definition: More severe injury; axon is damaged, but connective tissue (endoneurium, perineurium, epineurium) remains at least partially intact.
  • Pathophysiology:
    • Axon undergoes Wallerian degeneration distal to injury
    • Schwann cells and connective tissue scaffolding remain, which guides regeneration
  • Causes: Severe crush or prolonged compression injuries
  • Symptoms:
    • Flaccid paralysis and loss of sensation distal to injury
    • Trophic changes may occur (skin, nails, hair)
  • Recovery: Gradual, weeks to months; rate ~1–3 mm/day

Neurotmesis

  • Definition: Most severe form; complete transection of axon and connective tissue
  • Pathophysiology: Wallerian degeneration occurs; without surgical intervention, regeneration is poor or misdirected
  • Causes: Sharp lacerations, severe trauma
  • Symptoms:
    • Complete loss of motor and sensory function distal to injury
    • Trophic changes and muscle atrophy occur rapidly
  • Recovery: Requires surgical repair; spontaneous recovery is unlikely

Related Terms

  • Wallerian degeneration: Degeneration of the axon distal to the site of injury; occurs in axonotmesis and neurotmesis
  • Conduction block: Interruption of nerve signal without axon damage; seen in neurapraxia
  • Sunderland classification: More detailed 5-degree classification of nerve injuries
    • 1 = neurapraxia, 2 = axonotmesis, 3–4 = increasing connective tissue involvement, 5 = neurotmesis
  • Neuropraxic segment: The part of nerve experiencing conduction block in neurapraxia
  • Regeneration rate: Peripheral nerves regenerate ~1–3 mm/day after axonotmesis if scaffold intact

Upper Extremity Neuropathies


Spinal and Torso Neuropathies


Lower Extremity Neuropathies


Other


See Also


References

Created by:
John Kiel on 2 October 2024 16:54:30
Authors:
Last edited:
26 November 2025 15:43:44
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