Correlation between intelligence, level of formal education, and nerve transfers for elbow flexion recovery outcomes following brachial plexus reconstructive surgery
Simon Miedema, Ana Carolina Lovaglio Rivas, Martin Bourguet, Maria Roca, Gilda Di Masi, Gonzalo Bonilla, Brenda Iglesias, Danilo Bataglia, Mariano Socolovsky

TL;DR
This study found that higher intelligence and more education are linked to better recovery after elbow flexion nerve transfer surgery.
Contribution
The study identifies a novel correlation between intelligence and post-surgical motor recovery outcomes in brachial plexus surgery.
Findings
Higher intelligence scores correlated with better BRMC motor outcomes (p = 0.023, r = 0.270).
Lower intelligence scores were associated with delayed surgery and poorer rehabilitation quality.
Patients with ≤7 years of education had significantly lower BRMC scores (p = 0.049).
Abstract
Several factors have been shown to influence post-surgical recovery for elbow flexion repair after nerve transfers for brachial plexus surgery. The brain's impact on surgical outcomes has garnered considerable attention, prompting an investigation into the influence of various cortical functions, including intelligence and academic achievement. The aim of this study is to investigate whether intelligence is correlated with functional outcomes of elbow flexion following nerve transfer. We conducted a retrospective study of patients who underwent nerve transfers to restore elbow flexion. Intelligence was assessed using the WAT BA and Matrix Reasoning subtest (MRT) of the WAIS-III, and the grade of scholarship was evaluated based on the years and levels of education completed. Motor recovery was assessed through the British Medical Research Council (BRMC) scale and strength index scores.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNerve Injury and Rehabilitation · Nerve injury and regeneration · Pain Management and Treatment
