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CEREBRAL/ERBS PALSY


Birth Injuries – Cerebral Palsy & Erbs Palsy

 

Some of the most common birth defects (or injuries) are two very different conditions known as cerebral palsy and Erbs (or brachial) palsy. Both cerebral and Erbs palsy are often the result of complications during child delivery itself, though cerebral palsy can sometimes occur before or some time after delivery.

 

 

Cerebral Palsy

 

Cerebral palsy is the generic term for a number of disorders affecting a baby’s brain function and body movement. Cerebral palsy can be the result of an injury to a baby’s brain in the womb, during delivery, or some time after birth. It can also be caused by a lack of oxygen flow to a baby’s brain during delivery.

 

 

Some situations that can cause or contribute to cerebral palsy include:

 

·        A treating physician/obstetrician’s failure to recognize the need to provide adequate oxygen to the baby, such as by caesarean section, or unreasonable delay in performing the procedure;

·        A mother’s use of a harmful prescription drug during pregnancy

·        Prolonged bleeding in the baby’s brain after delivery, usually due to head trauma

·        Extremely premature birth

 

 

Symptoms of cerebral palsy in a child may take some time to show up, but can include the following: slow development in terms of rolling over, crawling, smiling, and talking; abnormal or decreased muscle tone, or “floppiness” of limbs; unusual posture; poor co-ordination; involuntary movements; and vision or hearing problems. 

 

 

Erbs (or Brachial) Palsy

 

Erbs (or brachial) palsy occurs in about two out of every 1,000 child deliveries, when a baby suffers injury to the brachial plexus  The brachial plexus is a group of nerves that travel from the spinal cord up the arm, supplying the arms and hands. Erbs palsy happens most often during delivery when excessive pressure is put on the baby’s head, neck, or shoulder because of difficulty delivering the shoulder area (known as “shoulder dystocia”). The condition occurs most frequently in babies of higher-than-average birth weight, and can happen when forceps or vacuum devices are used with too much pressure during delivery. The brachial plexus is simply stretched too far until important nerves are torn or ruptured. Symptoms of Erbs palsy can include paralysis or limpness in a baby’s arm, limited or no movement in hands and fingers, and loss of sensation in the hands and fingers. Often the baby will simply hold the affected arm very close to the body, and will appear to be unable to move the arm itself, the hands, or the fingers.

 

 

Complications from the condition known as Erbs palsy are typically the result of a treating physician/obstetrician’s:

 

·        Failure to recognize that a caesarean section should have been performed, based on the baby’s size

·        Failure to adequately deliver the baby in situations involving “shoulder dystocia

·        Use of excessive pressure on the baby’s head, neck, or shoulder during delivery

 

 

Erbs palsy usually results in a baby’s inability to fully rotate and flex his or her arm, and if a nerve is torn during delivery, permanent nerve damage may result. If no tearing has occurred, bruising and swelling around the nerve should subside and normal movement become possible in a few months. If a baby is diagnosed with Erbs palsy, treatment and therapy such as immobilization of the arm and special exercises may help to improve or eliminate the condition. If the condition is severe or permanent enough, surgery may be necessary to correct the problem.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

FindLaw, Inc. Copyright 2003

 

Cerebral Palsy Causes
Below are examples of known causes of cerebral palsy. Unfortunately, this condition is not always explainable.

But when it results from a birth injury, a law firm such as ours can investigate to find what went wrong. Click here for a free birth injury evaluation.
  • In general, cerebral palsy is a condition caused by restricted or delayed oxygen flow to the brain in the unborn or newborn baby. Severity depends upon the section of brain affected.

  • Specifically, the damage results from inadequate blood flow to the brain and/or inadequate concentrations of oxygen in brain tissue.

  • Other, less common factors can contribute to brain damage causes of cerebral palsy, such as unusual viruses, mother-child blood type conflict, or accidental head trauma.

  • This unfortunate disability is sometimes not preventable. However, mistreatment or poor diagnosis of pregnancy complications, or mishandling of the baby during birth, are often contributing factors that should have been prevented.
    [More]

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