Sensory Recovery
Cross-source consensus on Sensory Recovery from 2 sources and 11 claims.
2 sources · 11 claims
Uses
Benefits
Comparisons
Background
Evidence quality
Where it comes from
Other
Other
Highlighted claims
- Sensory recovery after back surgery is uncertain, and surgery does not reliably restore sensation. — Stress Response, Proximal Treatment, Sensory Recovery, and Clinician Self-Care
- The case involved persistent right-leg sensory loss after back surgery despite resolution of pain and functional limitations. — Movement Debrief Episode 13
- The sensory loss followed the fibular nerve distribution, especially the superficial fibular nerve region. — Movement Debrief Episode 13
- Sensation testing included sharp sensation, dull sensation, and two-point discrimination. — Movement Debrief Episode 13
- The current sensory restoration strategy used sensory discrimination to map perception and test whether repeated input might improve it. — Stress Response, Proximal Treatment, Sensory Recovery, and Clinician Self-Care
- After neurodynamic treatment, sharp sensation, dull sensation, and two-point discrimination improved. — Movement Debrief Episode 13
- Responsive sensory spots were considered somewhat encouraging, but expectations for meaningful restoration remained uncertain. — Stress Response, Proximal Treatment, Sensory Recovery, and Clinician Self-Care
- Another surgery was not presented as an obvious answer when the first surgery failed to resolve the sensory deficit. — Stress Response, Proximal Treatment, Sensory Recovery, and Clinician Self-Care
- Neurodynamic involvement was less obvious because straight leg raise, slump testing, and other positions did not clearly alter sensation. — Stress Response, Proximal Treatment, Sensory Recovery, and Clinician Self-Care
- Traction caused slight within-session improvement in sharp sensation, suggesting possible nervous-system modifiability. — Movement Debrief Episode 13