Can a damaged nerve cause paralysis?

A problem with the nervous system causes paralysis. The nervous system is your body's command and communication system. It sends signals from the brain throughout your body, telling it what to do. If something damages the nervous system, messages can't get through to muscles.
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What nerve causes paralysis?

Paralysis can occur if any part of the facial nerve, called the seventh cranial nerve, becomes inflamed or damaged. The facial nerve has branches throughout both sides of the face and controls many muscle groups, including those in the brow, eyelid, cheek, and lips.
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What will happen if nerve is damaged?

Nerves are fragile and can be damaged by pressure, stretching, or cutting. Injury to a nerve can stop signals to and from the brain, causing muscles not to work properly, and a loss of feeling in the injured area.
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Can you recover from nerve paralysis?

Many people recover from sudden facial nerve paralysis without medical treatment, though full recovery may take as long as a year. NYU Langone doctors monitor nerve function as it returns using tests such as electromyography.
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Can nerve damage in leg cause paralysis?

The most common type of peripheral neuropathy is diabetic neuropathy, caused by a high sugar level and resulting in nerve fiber damage in your legs and feet. Symptoms can range from tingling or numbness in a certain body part to more serious effects, such as burning pain or paralysis.
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Foot Drop, Peroneal Nerve Injury - Everything You Need To Know - Dr. Nabil Ebraheim



What can cause sudden paralysis?

Sudden paralysis causes may include:
  • Trauma, including spinal cord injury.
  • Stroke and transient ischemic attack (TIA)
  • Brain hemorrhage (bleeding)
  • Infections, including tetanus and West Nile virus.
  • Guillain-Barré syndrome, which is a rare autoimmune disorder possibly triggered by an infection.
  • Toxins such as venom or poison.
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What happens if nerve damage goes untreated?

Left untreated, nerve damage may worsen over time. It can sometimes start in the nerves farthest from the brain and spinal cord -- like those in the feet and hands. Then it may move up into the legs and arms.
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What are the signs of nerve damage?

The signs of nerve damage
  • Numbness or tingling in the hands and feet.
  • Feeling like you're wearing a tight glove or sock.
  • Muscle weakness, especially in your arms or legs.
  • Regularly dropping objects that you're holding.
  • Sharp pains in your hands, arms, legs, or feet.
  • A buzzing sensation that feels like a mild electrical shock.
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Can nerve damage be repaired?

Sometimes a section of a nerve is cut completely or damaged beyond repair. Your surgeon can remove the damaged section and reconnect healthy nerve ends (nerve repair) or implant a piece of nerve from another part of your body (nerve graft). These procedures can help your nerves regrow.
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How long before nerve damage becomes permanent?

As a specialist in peripheral nerve surgery, Dr. Seruya wants his patients to know that after a period of 12-18 months nerve damage can become permanent.
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Is nerve damage serious?

Some nerve-related problems do not interfere with daily life. Others get worse quickly and may lead to long-term, severe symptoms and problems. When a medical condition can be found and treated, your outlook may be excellent. But sometimes, nerve damage can be permanent, even if the cause is treated.
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How do you test for nerve damage?

A nerve conduction velocity (NCV) test — also called a nerve conduction study (NCS) — measures how fast an electrical impulse moves through your nerve. NCV can identify nerve damage. During the test, your nerve is stimulated, usually with electrode patches attached to your skin.
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How long can nerve damage last?

On average, a pinched nerve can last from as little as a few days to as long as 4 to 6 weeks — or, in some cases, even longer (in which case you should see your doctor).
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Is nerve paralysis permanent?

There isn't a cure for permanent paralysis. The spinal cord can't heal itself. Temporary paralysis like Bell's palsy often goes away over time without treatment.
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What are the early symptoms of paralysis?

sudden weakness on one side of the face, with arm weakness or slurred speech – a stroke or transient ischaemic attack (TIA or "mini-stroke") sudden weakness on one side of the face, with earache or face pain – Bell's palsy. temporary paralysis when waking up or falling asleep – sleep paralysis.
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What are the four types of paralysis?

What Are the Four Types of Paralysis?
  • Monoplegia.
  • Hemiplegia.
  • Paraplegia.
  • Quadriplegia/tetraplegia.
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Does an MRI show nerve damage?

Nerve damage can usually be diagnosed based on a neurological examination and can be correlated by MRI scan findings. The MRI scan images are obtained with a magnetic field and radio waves. No harmful ionizing radiation is used.
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How does a neurologist check for nerve damage?

By measuring the electrical activity they are able to determine if there is nerve damage, the extent of the damage and potentially the cause of the damage. Frequently the neurologist will recommend common, noninvasive neurological evaluations such as electromyography (EMG) and nerve conduction velocity (NCV) testing.
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Is nerve damage a disability?

If you suffer from a condition that causes nerve damage that is so severe that it impacts your ability to work for at least a year, you may be eligible to receive Social Security Disability benefits.
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How do nerves get damaged?

The most common cause of nerve damage is diabetes. Another common cause of nerve damage is an inherited anatomical defect. Other possible causes of nerve damage include: repetitive motion, Lyme disease, sudden trauma, aging, vitamin deficiencies, exposure to toxins, infections, and autoimmune disorders.
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Can a pinched nerve cause paralysis?

Pinched nerves cause pain in the neck and arm, weakness, numbness, and tingling among other symptoms. A compressed spinal cord can cause weakness in the arms and legs, numbness, balance trouble, pain, difficulty with using the hands, etc. A compressed spinal cord can lead to paralysis if severe.
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What kind of doctor treats nerve damage?

Neurologists are specialists who treat diseases of the brain and spinal cord, peripheral nerves and muscles. Neurological conditions include epilepsy, stroke, multiple sclerosis (MS) and Parkinson's disease. Dr.
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What is end stage neuropathy?

Stage 5: Complete Loss of Feeling

This is the final stage of neuropathy, and it is where you've lost any and all feeling in your lower legs and feet. You do not feel any pain, just intense numbness. This is because there are no nerves that are able to send signals to your brain.
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Can stress cause temporary paralysis?

Some individuals are more susceptible to periods of temporary paralysis after exposure to certain triggers, such as stress, trauma, or anxiety. The periodic paralysis can result in severe muscle weakness and the partial or complete inability to move parts of the body.
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How long does temporary paralysis last?

Attacks can last anywhere from an hour to a day or two. Some people have weakness that changes from day to day. Later on, your muscles could become permanently weak and your symptoms could get more severe.
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