A little update on my hubby's trip to Mayo
Posted: Tue Oct 06, 2009 10:37 am
A few of us who have had (or with loved ones who have had) the nerve transfer or tricep to deltoid have been sharing notes so I though I would post a little update from my husband's trip to Mayo last week. He is currently 1.5 years post surgery and a little over 2 years post accident. When we went out a year ago, he had an EMG that showed the early stages of innervation in the deltoid.
He did not have an EMG this time, instead they repeated the strength and movement study he had performed prior to surgery. The research team that conducted the study were really encouraged....he now has "numbers" in his deltoid that were zero prior to his surgery, and all other muscles have at least tripled in strength on their own.
One of the other things they do is measure how the muscle is responding to the nerve message....from what he understood an injured muscle will respond in sort of a bell shaped curve, where as an uninjured muscle will spike quickly and then maintain (I've really simplified that explanation, but I hope I've got it right) At any rate, his deltoid was responding with the quick spike and maintaining, which is good and they said indicates continued improvement over the next few years
The afternoon appointment with the actual BPI team was more of a mixed bag. They were surprised that couldn't yet raise his arm and weren't as encouraged by the strength he has back. It was a quick meeting though and my husband didn't get the clarify some of the discrepencies from the morning appointment, so were going to call back this week and ask a few more questions. At any rate, they floated the potentional for a tendon transfer when we go back in one year.
So, some positives and negatives, but overall my husband is feeling really good about it. He can feel how much his strength has improved and is just going to keep working at it. At this point, he isn't up for any more surgeries, he has really figured out how to do so much on his own that he's at peace with where he is right now. And I can't aruge with that, but it is nice not to have such a time crunch for surgical decisions now.
Anyway, long update, but I know I'm always interested to read the progression of others who had the same surgery.
My best to you all-Amanda
He did not have an EMG this time, instead they repeated the strength and movement study he had performed prior to surgery. The research team that conducted the study were really encouraged....he now has "numbers" in his deltoid that were zero prior to his surgery, and all other muscles have at least tripled in strength on their own.
One of the other things they do is measure how the muscle is responding to the nerve message....from what he understood an injured muscle will respond in sort of a bell shaped curve, where as an uninjured muscle will spike quickly and then maintain (I've really simplified that explanation, but I hope I've got it right) At any rate, his deltoid was responding with the quick spike and maintaining, which is good and they said indicates continued improvement over the next few years
The afternoon appointment with the actual BPI team was more of a mixed bag. They were surprised that couldn't yet raise his arm and weren't as encouraged by the strength he has back. It was a quick meeting though and my husband didn't get the clarify some of the discrepencies from the morning appointment, so were going to call back this week and ask a few more questions. At any rate, they floated the potentional for a tendon transfer when we go back in one year.
So, some positives and negatives, but overall my husband is feeling really good about it. He can feel how much his strength has improved and is just going to keep working at it. At this point, he isn't up for any more surgeries, he has really figured out how to do so much on his own that he's at peace with where he is right now. And I can't aruge with that, but it is nice not to have such a time crunch for surgical decisions now.
Anyway, long update, but I know I'm always interested to read the progression of others who had the same surgery.
My best to you all-Amanda