STATUTE OF LIMINATIONS, BY ATTY USED IN Erb’s Palsy

Introduction to Erb’s Palsy: The Ultimate Guide to Parents Need to Know

Welcome to this authoritative guide on Erb’s palsy.  Hearing the words “Erb’s palsy” can stop any parent in their tracks. In a single moment, a routine newborn exam can become a discussion about nerves, weakness, therapy, and long-term outcomes. The most important point to understand is this: Erb’s palsy is often treatable, frequently improves with early intervention, and benefits from structured, proactive care.

This guide explains what Erb’s palsy is, why it happens, what signs to look for, how it is diagnosed, what treatment typically involves, and how to plan for your child’s best possible recovery.

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What Is Erb’s Palsy?

Erb’s palsy is a type of brachial plexus birth injury. The brachial plexus is a network of nerves that originates in the neck and travels into the shoulder, arm, and hand. These nerves control muscle movement and sensation in the upper limb.

Erb’s palsy most commonly involves injury to the upper brachial plexus (typically nerve roots C5 and C6, and sometimes C7). Because these nerves power key shoulder and elbow movements, a child with Erb’s palsy may have difficulty lifting the arm, bending the elbow, or rotating the shoulder.

A simple way to think about it

  • The brain sends a message.
  • The brachial plexus carries that message to the arm muscles.
  • If those nerves are stretched or damaged, the message is delayed, weakened, or blocked.

How Does Erb’s Palsy Happen?

Erb’s palsy most often occurs during childbirth when the baby’s shoulder and neck experience traction that stretches the brachial plexus. This can happen in difficult deliveries, including situations where the baby’s shoulder becomes lodged behind the mother’s pelvic bone, a complication known as shoulder dystocia.

It is important to use precise language here. Erb’s palsy is not “caused by parents,” and it is not something you could have prevented at home. It is typically associated with mechanical forces during delivery.

Risk factors do not guarantee injury, but they can increase the likelihood of complex delivery mechanics:

  • Shoulder dystocia
  • Larger birth weight (macrosomia)
  • Prolonged labor
  • Assisted delivery (forceps or vacuum)
  • Maternal diabetes (associated with larger babies)
  • Breech presentation (in some delivery scenarios)

Erb’s palsy can also occur outside of childbirth due to trauma, but when parents discuss it in infants, it usually refers to a birth-related brachial plexus injury.

Types of Brachial Plexus Injury (Why Severity Matters)

Not all nerve injuries are the same. Understanding the injury pattern helps clinicians estimate recovery potential and determine whether surgery should be considered.

1) Neurapraxia (stretch injury)

  • The nerve is stretched but not torn.
  • Often the mildest form.
  • Many infants improve significantly over weeks to months.

2) Neuroma

  • Scar tissue forms around the injured nerve.
  • Signals can pass through, but poorly.
  • May require specialized evaluation if progress stalls.

3) Rupture

4) Avulsion

  • The nerve root is pulled away from the spinal cord.
  • This is the most severe type.
  • Surgical planning is typically required; recovery without intervention is limited.

You do not need to diagnose the type yourself. Your role as a parent is to track function, attend follow-ups, and ensure your child receives timely specialist assessment.

Signs and Symptoms Parents Often Notice

Many parents first notice something “different” about one arm soon after birth. Typical signs are consistent and clinically recognizable.

Common signs of Erb’s palsy

  • Reduced movement in one arm compared to the other
  • Arm held close to the body with the elbow straight
  • Shoulder weakness, especially difficulty lifting the arm
  • Limited elbow flexion (difficulty bending the elbow)
  • Reduced outward rotation of the shoulder
  • Differences in reflexes on the affected side

A classic posture sometimes described by clinicians is the waiter’s tip position: shoulder rotated inward, arm adducted, elbow extended, forearm pronated. Not every baby will show this textbook pattern, but it is a well-known presentation.

What about the hand?

In classic Erb’s palsy (upper plexus), the hand and fingers may move relatively well. If the hand is also weak, clinicians may consider a broader brachial plexus involvement.

When to Seek Urgent Medical Attention

Erb’s palsy itself is typically evaluated through scheduled pediatric and specialist follow-ups, but certain signs require immediate assessment:

  • Significant swelling or unusual deformity of the clavicle/arm (possible fracture)
  • Breathing difficulties or an asymmetric chest movement pattern
  • Signs of severe pain with handling
  • Fever or lethargy unrelated to typical newborn adjustment

If you are unsure, contact your pediatrician promptly. Early evaluation is not about panic. It is about precision.

How Erb’s Palsy Is Diagnosed

Diagnosis is primarily clinical, based on physical examination and observation of movement patterns. Your child’s clinician will assess:

Tests and imaging that may be used

Not every child needs every test. Specialists may consider:

  • Ultrasound or X-ray if bone injury is suspected
  • MRI in selected cases to evaluate nerve roots and soft tissue structures
  • EMG/Nerve conduction studies sometimes used later to assess nerve function and recovery patterns

A key part of diagnosis is not just confirming Erb’s palsy. It is establishing a baseline, then monitoring progress over time.

The Recovery Timeline: What Parents Should Expect

Most families want one answer: “Will my child recover?” The responsible answer is: many children improve, but outcomes depend on severity, early progress, and the presence of functional milestones.

Typical recovery patterns

  • First weeks: movement may be limited; the care team focuses on safe handling and preventing stiffness.
  • By 1 to 3 months: early return of shoulder and elbow movement can be a positive indicator.
  • By 3 to 6 months: progress should be measurable. If improvement is minimal, specialist teams may discuss advanced interventions.
  • Beyond 6 months: therapy often continues; decisions about surgery, if needed, are usually time-sensitive and guided by function.

The most important principle is repetition for emphasis: track function, attend follow-ups, and start therapy early.

Treatment: What Proactive Care Looks Like

Treatment is usually stepwise, beginning with conservative care and advancing when milestones are not met. This approach aligns with the recommendations outlined in this article, which emphasizes the importance of personalized treatment plans based on individual patient needs and responses.

1) Early positioning and safe handling

In the newborn period, clinicians often recommend techniques to support the arm and protect joints. The goal is to avoid stiffness and prevent compensatory movement patterns that can limit long-term function.

2) Physical therapy (PT) and occupational therapy (OT)

Therapy is the foundation of recovery and should be guided by professionals experienced in pediatric brachial plexus injuries.

Therapy goals typically include:

  • Maintaining passive range of motion at the shoulder, elbow, and wrist
  • Preventing contractures (tightening that limits movement)
  • Encouraging symmetrical movement patterns
  • Strengthening returning muscles safely
  • Developing age-appropriate motor skills with adaptation as needed

Parents often play a central role because home exercises, performed correctly and consistently, can significantly influence outcomes. Consistency matters. Technique matters. Follow-up matters.

3) Splinting or orthoses (when indicated)

Some children benefit from splints to support alignment and function, particularly if muscle imbalance begins to affect posture or joint positioning.

4) Botulinum toxin injections (selected cases)

In some cases, clinicians use botulinum toxin to reduce overactivity in stronger opposing muscles. This is not a first-line treatment for every child. It is a targeted tool used in specialized care plans.

5) Surgery (when functional recovery is limited)

If spontaneous recovery is insufficient, surgical intervention may be considered. Surgical planning is individualized and typically guided by:

  • The degree of motor recovery by specific ages
  • The return of key movements (especially elbow flexion)
  • Specialist examination findings and, in some cases, diagnostic studies

Common surgical categories include:

  • Nerve grafting
  • Nerve transfers
  • Secondary orthopedic procedures later in childhood to address muscle imbalance, joint limitations, or functional deficits

Surgery is not a failure of therapy. It is a proactive strategy when nerve recovery is not meeting expected milestones.

attorney chart on life time cost of erb's palsy

Possible Long-Term Effects (And How They Are Managed)

Even with improvement, some children experience residual differences in strength, range of motion, or endurance. The goal is always the same: maximize function, prevent secondary complications, and support development.

Potential long-term considerations include:

Ongoing therapy, periodic specialist review, and age-appropriate functional training are often effective in addressing these concerns.

Practical Guidance for Parents at Home

Parents do not need to become clinicians, but they do need a plan. A structured home approach helps you convert appointments into outcomes.

What to do consistently

  • Follow the PT/OT home program exactly as prescribed.
  • Track new movements weekly (small changes are meaningful).
  • Attend scheduled reassessments, even when things seem “better.”
  • Ask for clear functional goals at each visit.

What to avoid

  • Avoid forcing painful ranges of motion
  • Avoid unsupervised exercises you found online that do not match your therapist’s guidance.
  • Avoid delaying specialist referral if progress plateaus.

Forward-thinking parenting in this context means one thing: early action reduces long-term risk.

Questions to Ask Your Pediatrician or Specialist

Bring a written list. It improves clarity and reduces missed details.

  • Which part of the brachial plexus appears involved?
  • What movements should we see return first, and by when?
  • When should PT/OT begin, and how frequently?
  • What are the indicators that a surgical consult is appropriate?
  • How will you measure progress at each visit?
  • Are there shoulder-specific risks we should monitor (stiffness, joint alignment)?
  • What is the plan if improvement slows after the first few months?

These questions support governance of care. They create accountability, documentation, and clear decision points.

Emotional and Family Impact: What Often Goes Unsaid

Erb’s palsy does not only affect the child’s arm. It affects routines, confidence, and family stress levels. Many parents experience guilt, anger, or anxiety after a complicated delivery, particularly when the injury was unexpected.

A neutral and practical perspective is often most helpful:

Proactive support is not optional. It is part of long-term success.

Treatment for Erb’s Palsy

  • The main goal of treatment is to enhance movement and build strength in the affected arm.
  • For mild cases where nerves are only stretched, physical therapy is often sufficient.
  • In more serious cases involving torn nerves, more intensive therapies and possibly surgery may be required to help restore movement in the child’s arm, hand, or shoulder.
  • With appropriate treatment, most infants with Erb’s palsy make a full recovery by their first birthday.
  • For newborns, treatment usually begins with physical therapy to prevent joint stiffness and support nerve healing.
  • In older children, therapy should start as soon as symptoms appear to maximize recovery. Early intervention is essential for the best possible outcomes.

A Clear Path Forward

Erb’s palsy is a serious diagnosis, but it is not a diagnosis of hopelessness. It is a call for structured care. It is a reason to prioritize early therapy. It is a reason to track functional milestones. It is a reason to build the right specialist team.

If you take only three points from this guide, take these:

  1. Start therapy early and follow the home program consistently.
  2. Monitor progress with your care team using clear milestones and timelines.
  3. Escalate to a brachial plexus specialist if improvement plateaus or key movements do not return on schedule.

With informed decisions and proactive follow-through, many children with Erb’s palsy achieve substantial functional improvement and thrive as they grow.

Frequently Asked Questions about Erb’s palsy

What is Erb’s palsy and which nerves does it affect?

Erb’s palsy is a type of brachial plexus birth injury that most commonly involves damage to the upper brachial plexus nerve roots C5 and C6, and sometimes C7. These nerves control muscle movement and sensation in the shoulder, arm, and hand, so injury can cause difficulty lifting the arm, bending the elbow, or rotating the shoulder.

How does Erb’s palsy occur during childbirth?

Erb’s palsy typically occurs during childbirth when traction stretches the baby’s brachial plexus nerves, especially if the baby’s shoulder becomes lodged behind the mother’s pelvic bone—a complication known as shoulder dystocia. Mechanical forces during delivery, such as prolonged labor or assisted delivery with forceps or vacuum, can increase this risk.

What are the common signs and symptoms parents should look for in a newborn with Erb’s palsy?

Parents may notice reduced movement in one arm compared to the other, the affected arm held close to the body with a straight elbow, shoulder weakness (difficulty lifting the arm), limited elbow flexion, reduced outward rotation of the shoulder, and differences in reflexes. A classic posture called the “waiter’s tip” position—shoulder rotated inward, arm adducted, elbow extended—is often observed.

What types of brachial plexus injuries cause Erb’s palsy and how do they affect recovery?

There are four main types: neurapraxia (a mild stretch injury with good recovery prospects), neuroma (scar tissue formation that may require evaluation if progress stalls), rupture (nerve torn but not at spinal cord; surgery might be needed), and avulsion (nerve root pulled from spinal cord; most severe with limited recovery without surgery). The injury type influences treatment decisions and recovery potential.

Risk factors include shoulder dystocia during delivery, larger birth weight (macrosomia), prolonged labor, assisted deliveries using forceps or vacuum devices, maternal diabetes which is associated with larger babies, and breech presentation in some cases. While these factors increase risk, they do not guarantee an injury will occur.

When should parents seek urgent medical attention for their newborn suspected of having Erb’s palsy?

Urgent medical care is needed if there is significant swelling or unusual deformity of the clavicle or arm suggesting fracture; breathing difficulties or asymmetric chest movement; signs of severe pain when handling the baby; or symptoms like fever or lethargy. Otherwise, evaluation usually proceeds through scheduled pediatric and specialist follow-ups.

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Call Nashville Erb’s Palsy Lawyer Timothy L. Miles for a Free Case Evaluation

If your child suffered Erb’s palsy as a result of malpractice or negligence, contact Timothy L. Milesan Erb’s Palsy lawyer in Nashville today for a free case evaluation. (855) 846-6529 or [email protected].

Timothy L. Miles, Esq.
Law Offices of Timothy L. Miles
Tapestry at Brentwood Town Center
300 Centerview Dr. #247
Mailbox #1091
Brentwood,TN 37027
Phone: (855) Tim-MLaw (855-846-6529)
Email: [email protected]
Website: www.classactionlawyertn.com

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Birth Injury Statute of Limitations by State

Alabama Two years from the injury or 6 months after discovery. No later than 4 years.
Alaska Two years from the injury or discovery. Not valid after 10 years.
Arizona Two years from the time of injury or date of discovery.
Arkansas Two years from the date of injury or 3 years if the injury resulted in wrongful death.
California Two years from the date of injury or 3 years if it led to death.
Colorado Two years from the date of injury.
Connecticut Three years from the date of injury or 2 years from the baby’s death.
Delaware Maximum of 3 years, including discovery.
Florida Two years from the date of injury and a maximum of 4 years for discovery.
Georgia Two years after injury and a maximum of 5 years for the discovery.
Hawaii Two years after injury and a maximum of 6 years for discovery.
Idaho Two years from the date of injury or the baby’s death.
Illinois Eight years from the injury. Not valid after 22nd birthday.
Indiana Two years after injury or discovery. Claim invalid after 8 years.
Iowa Two years from injury or discovery. Claim invalid after 10 years.
Kansas Two years from the injury and a maximum of 4 years for discovery.
Kentucky One year from the injury and 5 years for discovery.
Louisiana One year from the injury and no more than 3 years for discovery.
Maine Three years from the injury or before the 6th birthday.
Maryland Five years from the injury and 3 years from the discovery. Claim invalid after the 11th birthday.
Massachusetts Three years from the injury or discovery but before the 9th birthday.
Michigan Two years of the injury or 6 months after discovery.
Minnesota Four years from the injury.
Mississippi Two years from the injury or discovery.
Missouri Two years from the injury or discovery.
Montana Three years from the injury or discovery but no later than 5 years.
Nebraska Two years from the injury or 1 year from discovery.
Nevada Three years from injury or discovery and 10 years for brain damage.
New Hampshire Three years from injury or discovery.
New Jersey Two years from injury or discovery.
New Mexico Three years from the injury.
New York Ten years after the discovery and 2 and a half years after turning 18.
North Carolina Three years from injury or discovery.
North Dakota Two years from injury or 3 years within the discovery.
Ohio One year from injury.
Oklahoma Seven years from injury.
Oregon Two years from injury or discovery.
Pennsylvania Two years from the discovery.
Rhode Island Three years from injury or discovery.
South Carolina Three years from injury or discovery.
South Dakota Two years from injury or discovery.
Tennessee One year from injury or discovery.
Texas Two years from the injury or discovery.
Utah Two years from injury or discovery.
Vermont Three years from injury or 2 years from discovery.
Virginia Two years from the injury.
Washington Three years from injury or 1 year from discovery.
Washington, D.C. Three years from injury or discovery.
West Virginia Two years from the injury or discovery.
Wisconsin Three years from the injury or 1 year from discovery.
Wyoming Two years from the date of injury or discovery.