Literature DB >> 31014111

Silas Weir Mitchell, MD, LLD, FRC: Neurological Evaluation and Rehabilitation of the Injured Upper Extremity.

Kevin M Klifto1, A Lee Dellon1.   

Abstract

Appreciating the history of Hand Surgery is part of what most of us enjoy about our profession. Most of us know that Silas Weir Mitchell, MD, coined the terms "Causalgia" and "Phantom Limb," yet few of us know that our present-day evaluation of the sensory and motor function of the hand and some of our rehabilitation methods for motor palsy were introduced by Mitchell as he worked, scholarly, in Turner's Lane Hospital, the first hospital devoted to nerve injuries, to understand Civil War gunshot wounds related to musket ball. Mitchell's contributions to neurosensory and motor evaluation were reviewed by reading his historical publications. Mitchell's described cervical sympathetic injury Horner's Syndrome), sensory recovery preceding motor recovery after proximal nerve injury, that more sensory information can be perceived by applying greater pressure, importance of passive joint movement to prevent contracture, value of electrical stimulation after motor palsy, value of rest to facilitate healing, ability of 1- and 2-point sensory testing to evaluate sensibility, value of testing temperature to understand neuropathology, importance of experimental peripheral nerve surgery to clinical care, recorded muscle strength by manual evaluation, staged degree of nerve injury, described Saturday night and crutch palsy, and first described Hoffmann-Tinel sign. Mitchell made signifiant and seminal observations, that have largely gone unrecognized and that we use today in care of the injured upper extremity.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Causalgia; Phantom Limb; Silas Weir Mitchell; electric stimulation; radial neuropathy

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31014111      PMCID: PMC7818038          DOI: 10.1177/1558944719843643

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hand (N Y)        ISSN: 1558-9447


  14 in total

1.  James R. Learmonth: the first peripheral nerve surgeon.

Authors:  A L Dellon; P C Amadio
Journal:  J Reconstr Microsurg       Date:  2000-04       Impact factor: 2.873

2.  Silas Weir Mitchell (1829-1914): toxicologist, neurologist and novelist.

Authors:  B J Hawgood
Journal:  J Med Biogr       Date:  2000-05

3.  Gunshot wounds and other injuries of nerves. 1864.

Authors:  S Weir Mitchell; George R Morehouse; William W Keen
Journal:  Clin Orthop Relat Res       Date:  2007-05       Impact factor: 4.176

4.  The sensational contributions of Erik Moberg.

Authors:  A L Dellon
Journal:  J Hand Surg Br       Date:  1990-02

5.  The Hoffmann-Tinel sign. 1915.

Authors:  P Hoffmann; D Buck-Gramcko; J D Lubahn
Journal:  J Hand Surg Br       Date:  1993-12

6.  Ernst Heinrich Weber (1795-1878) leipzig physiologist.

Authors: 
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  1967-01-23       Impact factor: 56.272

7.  The first nerve graft, Vulpian, and the nineteenth century neural regeneration controversy.

Authors:  E S Dellon; A L Dellon
Journal:  J Hand Surg Am       Date:  1993-03       Impact factor: 2.230

8.  Relationship between cutaneous pressure threshold and two-point discrimination.

Authors:  O C Aszmann; A L Dellon
Journal:  J Reconstr Microsurg       Date:  1998-08       Impact factor: 2.873

9.  Experiments on the Section of the Glosso-Pharyngeal and Hypoglossal Nerves of the Frog, and Observations of the Alterations Produced Thereby in the Structure of Their Primitive Fibres.

Authors:  Augustus Waller
Journal:  Edinb Med Surg J       Date:  1851-10-01

10.  Peripheral Nerve Injuries.

Authors:  H J Seddon
Journal:  Glasgow Med J       Date:  1943-03
View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.