Nerve Injury (Proximal Median Nerve)
Overview
Plain-Language Overview
A proximal median nerve injury affects a major nerve in the arm that controls movement and sensation in parts of the hand and forearm. This nerve injury can cause weakness in the muscles that help bend the wrist and fingers, as well as numbness or tingling in the thumb, index, middle, and part of the ring finger. The injury usually happens near the elbow or upper forearm, which can impact daily activities like gripping or pinching. Because the median nerve also controls some fine motor skills, damage can lead to difficulty with tasks requiring precision. This condition involves the nervous system, specifically the peripheral nerves that connect the spinal cord to the hand.
Clinical Definition
Nerve Injury (Proximal Median Nerve) refers to damage to the median nerve at or above the level of the elbow, often caused by trauma, compression, or laceration. The median nerve is responsible for innervating the flexor muscles of the forearm, the thenar muscles, and providing sensory input to the lateral palm and first three and a half fingers. Injury results in motor deficits such as weakness in wrist and finger flexion, and loss of thumb opposition, as well as sensory loss in the median nerve distribution. Common causes include supracondylar fractures, entrapment syndromes, or penetrating injuries. Clinically, this injury is significant because it impairs hand function, leading to characteristic signs like the ape hand deformity and difficulty with fine motor tasks. Electrophysiological studies and clinical examination are essential for diagnosis and localization.