Outpatient clinics for the Children's Brachial Plexus Injury Service take place at the Royal Hospital for Children in Glasgow
Inpatient admissions and surgery take place at the Royal Hospital for Children in Glasgow
Outreach clinics are held twice a year at Woodend Hospital in Aberdeen
Administration is based at the New Victoria Hospital in Glasgow
This page contains information about the brachial plexus, nerves and injuries.
Each child is affected differently by brachial plexus injury and each family reacts in their own way. Therefore treatment and care is approached with sensitivity and individualised. Support is provided for the family and child as they grow, develop, and face new challenges.
This page aims to give you some basic facts relating to obstetric brachial plexus injury (OBPI/Erb's palsy) as well as some more detailed information which you may wish to read.
We have included useful contact information and links to organisations which may be able to support you further.
A brachial plexus injury is a rare event which affects approximately one in every 1800 babies born in the UK. It can cause weakness in the baby's shoulder, arm, and hand, but the effect of the injury is very variable. The speed of recovery also varies, some showing big improvements within days to weeks, while others recover much more slowly, and these children may benefit from surgical treatment.
Other terms you may hear used for obstetric brachial plexus injury (OBPI) are "obstetric brachial plexus palsy" (OBPP) and "Erb's palsy".
'"Erb's palsy" (named after a 19th century surgeon) was used to describe the commonest type of injury in children. See this page for further reading: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erb's_palsy
Obstetric brachial plexus injury (OBPI/Erb's palsy) in a newborn usually occurs during a difficult delivery. This may be because of a large baby, a breech presentation, or a prolonged labour. OBPI/Erb's palsy may also happen when the baby must be delivered quickly to prevent more serious harm to the mother and/or baby and some force is necessary to pull the baby from the birth canal.
The baby's shoulder may be stretched away from its neck and injury to the nerves which run from the neck down into the arm may result. A brachial plexus birth injury may therefore be a necessary consequence of being born alive after a difficult situation has arisen.
In older children brachial plexus injury (BPI) may occur occasionally in contact sports, serious falls or car or motorcycle accidents. Very rarely other conditions such as inflammation or tumour may affect the brachial plexus.
The nerves which make up the brachial plexus carry electrical signals (like 'instructions') from the brain to the arm so that the shoulder, arm and hand can feel and move. If nerves are injured, the muscles do not receive the instructions from the brain to move, so the arm does not move normally and will tend to lie by the baby's side from the moment they are born.
Most commonly the nerves which control elevation movements of the shoulder and bending of the elbow (C5, C6 nerve roots) are affected. The arm lies with the elbow straight, the wrist bent and the hand pointing backwards. The baby can move his or her fingers. If the C7 nerve root is also affected then there will also be weakness of the wrist, making it drop.
In the most severe cases the nerves to the hand (C8 and T1) are also damaged causing the whole arm and hand to be paralysed.
The baby may not have much feeling (such as hot temperatures or pain) in their arm. They might not pay much attention to that side. Or they may have a change in skin colour (usually more purple or blotchy). Some children with a more severe injury may have bruising and swelling around their neck. Others may have a drooping eyelid and small pupil in the eye on the same side as the injury (Horner's Syndrome).
Whenever brachial plexus injury exists it simply means that some or all of the nerves that form the brachial plexus have stopped working, so the muscles they supply can't work. However nerves can stop working because of very different grades of damage and only the worse ones need surgery:-
The grade of injury to the nerves determines the speed and extent of recovery. Nerve repair surgery may be recommended for a baby with the more severe grades of injury. Usually that decision is finalised when the patient is about 3 to 4 months old.
Unfortunately at the start there is no way to tell accurately what grade of injury is affecting each nerve that has stopped working. So it is unlikely that on your first visit to clinic your specialist will be able to tell you precisely how well your child will recover, or if they will need surgery.
There are some ways that your surgeon and therapist can assess the grade of injury to the affected nerves, and best advise on how to look after your child:-
Outcomes are very variable. Some babies recover fully within weeks. Others recover pretty well over a number of months. But in a small proportion recovery is slow and incomplete.
In over half of cases the injury heals itself within the first month to six weeks. About 80 to 90 percent of children make a complete or nearly complete recovery within the first year (i.e. they regain all movements). In children who don't get all their movements back it is most often some shoulder movements that don't recover. Loss of use of the hand is rare.
Some children will develop growth problems in the affected shoulder and need shoulder operations or muscle transfers to try to normalise growth. Their arms, collarbones and shoulder blades may end up somewhat smaller than normal, but it is very rare to require any operations for this.
Overall, children with obstetric brachial plexus injury (OBPI/Erb's palsy) do very well in life, no matter what the severity of the injury.
It must be remembered that nature's healing enables the majority of children to improve with time:
Along with your local therapist, our Specialist Physiotherapist will assess the movement of your child's arm using a special scoring system. They will also show you the movement exercises that you need to do on your child's arm.
Because your child can't move their arm by themselves the joints may become stiff. The exercises will help to stop this happening. If joints remain flexible then there is a better chance of the muscles working well as the child improves.
Different nerves supply different muscles, and may be affected differently. So muscles around the shoulder can become out of balance with each other. That puts the shoulder joint at risk of developing abnormally, or even of gradually sliding out of position (dislocating). It is therefore particularly important that shoulder exercises are done as often as possible.
Most children will not need nerve repair surgery, but for some it will be of benefit. The decision needs to be made when the baby is 3 to 4 months old, or else the muscles begin to waste and the benefit of nerve repairs becomes lost. Babies usually cope very well with this operation, and of course will have no memory of it.
Nerve operations firstly involve releasing scar tissue and looking at and testing the brachial plexus nerves to decide if they should be repaired (called the 'exploration'). This is the most sensitive way to judge the grade of injury, and so occasionally the surgeon will decide that the nerves are best left alone to continue to recover.
More often the surgeon finds that in fact the nerves are damaged badly enough that they won't grow back well, and so nerve repairs are done in the same operation. Most often 'nerve grafts' are used to repair the nerves after the damaged parts have been removed. This involves taking a relatively unimportant nerve from another part of your child's body and 'plugging it in' to bypass the damaged portion of brachial plexus nerve. Usually these grafts are taken from the back of the leg. Scars are kept to a minimum.
Even after such surgery there will be a considerable delay before we see the outcome as the nerves still need to re-grow and repair themselves.
If your child's shoulder becomes a problem, we may suggest a range of treatments such as manipulation, injection, application of a plaster cast, or even a bigger operation to put the shoulder in the correct place. These can be combined with surgery to the muscles, tendons or bones around the shoulder to provide power to an area which would otherwise be too weak to work properly.
If your child requires any form of surgery this will be discussed fully with you. The benefits and risks involved will be explained to you and any questions you have will be answered. This will let you have the information you need to make the decision about whether to have the operation on your child or not.
Occupational therapy (O.T.) may be necessary depending upon your child's development and functional needs. In pre-school or early primary school age children occupational therapists can assess for the development of normal milestones and patterns of hand use, writing or play. They can provide strategies, play or aids to correct problems or to make it easier for children who have not regained full function to do more. That may involve work with nurseries, or later on in schools.
For older children with specific functional problems the occupational therapist may be able to provide tools to enable them to do more.
It is normal to feel devastated by the diagnosis of a potentially serious condition in your child.
We will endeavour to provide as much knowledge and support as is reasonable to help you to come to terms with the diagnosis. We would also recommend contacting a support group such as the Erb's Palsy Group.
However it's very clear that most children diagnosed with brachial plexus injury will make very good progress and regain good use of their affected arm.
Children adapt very well, so even those left with some muscle weakness develop ways to take part in most activities along with their friends and classmates.
Unless your child recovers fully at a very young age they will be offered review on a regular basis at the multi-disciplinary clinic until they outgrow our services at the children's hospital. At particular times in their life they may require further help and this will commonly be arranged through our Occupational Therapy colleagues or the Clinical Psychology Service (who specialise in such problems in children). With your help we aim to identify specific problems and help your family and your child to adjust to the impact of a brachial plexus injury.
If you are travelling from Northern Ireland to Glasgow to attend one of our clinics, or for an inpatient stay, the HSCB (Northern Ireland) will cover your travel costs, as well as help with booking tickets and accommodation.
For more information contact the HSCB Travel Office, 12-22 Linenhall Street, Belfast, BT2 8BS
Telephone: 0300 555 0116 (Monday - Friday 9.00am to 5.00pm)
Open the attached PDF document for full information and contact details.
Outpatients, Ground Floor
Royal Hospital for Children
1345 Govan Road
GLASGOW
G51 4TF
0141 201 0000 (Switchboard)
Contact the service administrator on:
0141 347 8916
ggc.brachial.plexus@nhs.scot
Or contact the appointments office on:
0141 347 8850 or 0800 592 087
appointmentsbookingcentre@ggc.scot.nhs.uk
You will need to give the patient's name and date of birth and/or NHS ID Number.
Paediatric Occupational Therapist:
0141 452 4650
nicola.hart6@nhs.scot
Paediatric Physiotherapist:
0141 452 4650
heather.farish2@nhs.scot