Erb's Palsy
1969; American Medical Association; Volume: 21; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1001/archneur.1969.00480160114014
ISSN1538-3687
Autores Tópico(s)Peripheral Nerve Disorders
ResumoERB'S description of paralysis of the upper portion of the brachial plexus is remembered mainly for its postscript. As an after-thought to his discussion, Erb noted that birth trauma is one of the causes of such paralysis, and the term Erb's (or more properly Duchenne-Erb's) palsy now usually refers to this phenomenon. Wilhelm Heinrich Erb (1840 to 1921) was the foremost German neurologist of his time and the first neurologist to wield a reflex hammer. 1 His original account of the tendon reflexes 2 advanced the art of neurologic diagnosis and was a great stimulus to physiologic research. Erb also pioneered in applying electrodiagnosis and electrotherapy to neurology, and it was he who first described the "reaction of degeneration" of muscle. 3 Not the least of Erb's accomplishments was his successful campaign to introduce neurologic instruction into the curriculum at Heidelberg. 4 He thus gained a place
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