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Birth Injuries
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Klumpke's Palsy may be prevented by anticipating the various risk factors that lead to it. These risk factors include gestational diabetes, excessive weight gain due to pregnancy, obesity, expectant mothers with a small pelvis, mothers who have given birth to large babies in the past, and mothers in post-term pregnancy.
Klumpke's Palsy is also preventable in most cases. Doctors should know how to facilitate a healthy delivery, whether complications arise or not. Up to three in a thousand babies suffer some type of brachial plexus injury during delivery, sometimes causing Klumpke's Palsy. Medical malpractice or negligence of the physician could be the cause.
Symptoms of Klumpke's Palsy occur from damage to the nerves of the seventh and eighth cervical and first thoracic vertebrae. Common signs are a limp hand, and fingers that do not move. Victims of Klumpke's Palsy may also sometimes suffer from Horner’s syndrome, which has symptoms of droopy eyelids and a smaller pupil in the affected eye.
If your child suffers from these symptoms or has been diagnosed with Klumpke's Palsy, you should immediately speak to an experienced Orlando birth injury lawyer. Click here for help.
