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What happens if a shot is injected wrong?
“A vaccine is an immunologically sensitive substance, and if you were to receive an injection too high – in the wrong place – you could get pain, swelling and reduced range of motion in that area,” says Tom Shimabukuro, deputy director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s immunization safety office.
What does hitting a nerve feel like?
The signs of nerve damage include the following: Numbness or tingling in the hands and feet. Feeling like you’re wearing a tight glove or sock. Muscle weakness, especially in your arms or legs.
Can they hit a nerve giving a shot?
Unfortunately, nerve damage is a fairly common injury that can occur during an intramuscular injection, especially in children.
What happens if I hit a nerve?
Nerves are fragile and can be damaged by pressure, stretching, or cutting. Injury to a nerve can stop signals to and from the brain, causing muscles not to work properly, and a loss of feeling in the injured area.
How do I know if its nerve pain?
Nerve pain often feels like a shooting, stabbing or burning sensation. Sometimes it can be as sharp and sudden as an electric shock. People with neuropathic pain are often very sensitive to touch or cold and can experience pain as a result of stimuli that would not normally be painful, such as brushing the skin.
How do you detect nerve damage?
A nerve conduction velocity (NCV) test — also called a nerve conduction study (NCS) — measures how fast an electrical impulse moves through your nerve. NCV can identify nerve damage. During the test, your nerve is stimulated, usually with electrode patches attached to your skin.
What happens if you hit the sciatic nerve with a needle?
Typically, needle placement results in an immediate electric-like shock sensation down the extremity. Concomitantly, upon injection of the agent, the most frequent presentation included severe radicular pain and paresthesia, with almost immediate onset of variable motor and sensory deficits.