temporary failure of nerve conduction in the absence of structural changes, due to blunt injury, compression, or ischemia
Focal Conduction Block
Transient
Ischemic
affects mainly large-caliber axons
More persistent
demyelinating
attributable to an underlying primary/segmental demyelination
axonal constriction
injury to a nerve resulting in paralysis without degeneration and followed by rapid and complete recovery of function
partial or complete conduction block over a segment of a nerve fiber, with temporary paralysis
nerve condition characterized by localized loss of conduction that causes short-term paralysis, there is no degeneration of the axon and complete recovery is usual
The most commonly described mechanism of injury is axial compression with a component of either hyperflexion or hyperextension
early signs of nerve injury include:
disturbance of sensation, weakness or paralysis of muscle, vasomotor and sudomotor paralysis in distribution of the affected nerve or nerves, abnormal sensitivity of nerve at point of injury
Neurapraxia has been reported in association with developmental cervical spinal stenosis, kyphosis, congenital fusions (Klippel-Feil syndrome), cervical instability (traumatic or developmental), and invertebral disc herniation.