Nerve regrowth after damage

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the topic of nerve regrowth after damage, specifically in the context of personal experiences with injuries to the thumb and other body parts. Participants explore the healing process, the nature of nerve damage, and the potential for recovery over time.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant describes experiencing a phantom sensation in their thumb after an injury, suggesting possible nerve damage and questioning if it can heal.
  • Another participant expresses skepticism about the healing of nerve damage but provides a link to a resource discussing nerve injuries.
  • A participant mentions the shortage of doctors in Canada, indicating a broader concern about access to medical care for nerve injuries.
  • One reply cites that recovery from nerve damage is typically slow and incomplete, with smaller wounds healing faster.
  • A participant shares their personal experience of gradual recovery of sensation over years after a similar injury, indicating that some feeling can return slowly.
  • Another participant states that sensory nerves regrow at approximately 1 mm per day, noting a delay in the initial recovery phase and sharing their own experience of nerve damage in the foot.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a mix of personal experiences and opinions about nerve regrowth, with some agreeing on the slow nature of recovery while others remain uncertain about the extent of healing possible. No consensus is reached on the specifics of recovery timelines or outcomes.

Contextual Notes

Participants reference personal anecdotes and external resources, but the discussion does not resolve the complexities of nerve damage healing, including variations based on injury severity and individual differences.

Who May Find This Useful

Individuals interested in personal accounts of nerve injury recovery, medical professionals seeking anecdotal evidence, and those researching the healing processes of sensory nerves may find this discussion relevant.

DaveC426913
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TL;DR
Can I expect feeling to return in my thumb after puncture damage?
I put a #2 Robertson bit through my thumbnail about a month ago*. After a week or so, it was still hurting, so I went in after the (perfectly square) piece of thumbnail that had been rammed into the nail bed**.

*trying to drill 4" deck screws into hardwood without a pilot hole tends to make a power drill wobbly
** I'm a popaholic, so is was in my wheelhouse - and my toolkit.

I've kept it bandaged - mostly so that I don't catch the ragged hole on anything, and bleed all over everything (again). It's healing up nicely now, so I've stopped bandaging it. Even the scab has gone, and nowe I just have a hole in my thumbnail with pink skin under it .

All the pain is gone, so it is only now that I am noticing that feeling has not returned to the tip of my thumb.

Ever heard of a phantom limb? Well I have a phantom bandage. My thumb feels exactly like there is still a bandage on it. When I touch things with my thumb tip it's as if I'm touching it through a bandage. (I suppose the same effect would be experienced if it were swollen and engorged with fluid, but again - no pain.)

So I am assuming this is nerve damage. Is this the kind of thing that can heal back?
 
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DaveC426913 said:
So I am assuming this is nerve damage. Is this the kind of thing that can heal back?
I've read somewhere lately that there is a pretty bad shortage of doctors in Canada now. Sorry that you are having to deal with that...

:wink:
 
berkeman said:
I've read somewhere lately that there is a pretty bad shortage of doctors in Canada now. Sorry that you are having to deal with that...

:wink:
I guess...

I have a GP. Far as I know she's not going anywhere.

But beyond my personal sitch, yes, many people are finding it hard to sign up for a doc.
 
jim mcnamara said:
Best answer: slow and incomplete return to recovering, still functioning tissue. This means size of wound forecasts "speed". smaller wounds generally reach whatatver end points faster.
I agree with this. I have a couple of spots like this. Some feeling has returned, but very slowly. I am still noticing improvement years later.
 
phyzguy said:
I agree with this. I have a couple of spots like this. Some feeling has returned, but very slowly. I am still noticing improvement years later.
Sixty years ago I cut my palm on glass - just below the lowest knuckle joint of my little finger at the top, outer part. It was sutured by a grumpy A&E nurse. The outside edge of my little finger was totally numb but, over the past years it is getting more and more 'normally' sensitive. Being past my sell-by date, I am constantly pleased by this recuperation. The same finger got dislocated (first joint, sticking right up in the air) The feeling is still improving, despite that. I'm a Wolverine.
 
Nerve re-growth speed of sensory nerves is approximately 1 mm/day + a 2 week initial delay when the body figures things out.

I once cut sensory nerves in my foot and had compromised feel from ankle to toes. This took a few years to recover.
 
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