Motor recovery of the upper extremities in traumatic quadriplegia: a multicenter study.

Clinicians need to know recovery of neurologic function in the upper extremities after traumatic quadriplegia to prognosticate function in self-care, to determine the effectiveness of various interventions, and to develop a comprehensive rehabilitation plan. This study was undertaken to determine the extent of recovery of key muscles of the arms in motor complete quadriplegic subjects. The hypothesis stated that patients with some motor power (grades 1.0 to 2.5/5) in muscles in the zone of partial preservation would recover at an earlier time and to a greater extent than those with no motor power (grade 0/5). One hundred fifty subjects, C4, C5, and C6 motor complete, were entered in the study within one week of injury from four centers. Serial muscle examinations of the biceps, wrist extensors, and triceps on the right and left sides were performed up to 24 months after spinal cord injury. The pattern of recovery in the key muscles of the 67 subjects with some motor power in the zone of partial preservation to grade 3/5 was significantly greater than the 83 subjects with no motor power (68% to 82% vs 14% to 36%, p less than .001) at three to six months postinjury. The plateau of the median manual muscle test score determined the extent of recovery and reached grade 4/5 in subjects with some motor power at three to six months. The pattern of recovery revealed more subjects with some motor power improved to grade 3/5 at all intervals earlier than those with no motor power (p less than .005).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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