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Why can't surgeons operate on nerves? We see when operating, surgeons always try to protect the major nerves. Doctors handle bones, muscles, tissues but not nerves. Why? Can they see the nerves?

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    Yes you can see nerves. Major subcutaneous nerves are actually larger than you think they are - somewhere between a small string and a string of wool. The difference is that they can’t be stitched together as well as skin, muscles and connective tissue, and they don’t heal as well. Also, cutting through nerves will usually affect a larger area than a cut through the skin, for example if you cut a nerve in the shoulder, it might be the one reaching to the fingertips (N. radialis/ulnaris e.g.)
    – Narusan
    Nov 4, 2018 at 22:45
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    @Narusan Sounds like there's an answer there.
    – Carey Gregory
    Nov 4, 2018 at 23:44
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    Welcome to MedicalSciences.SE! Please take the tour and read the help center. For reasons mentioned in this post and in How to Ask, we require prior research information when asking questions. See this list of helpful resources. Please help us to help you and edit your question to provide more information on what you have read on this subject, what made you are ask this question, and any problems you are having understanding your research. If you found nothing, what did you Google? Nov 5, 2018 at 9:24
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    Surgeons do operate on nerves. I've had a schwannoma removed before. And as far as the other structures, surgeons only cut what they need to in order to achieve the desired result. They don't just flay open the body.
    – JohnP
    Nov 5, 2018 at 14:23

1 Answer 1

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Well, you can do do various surgical procedures on nerves. You can suture a macroscopic nerve (i.e. a nerve that you can see) that has been injured. However, there are various problems that come with suturing an injured nerve.

One of the main problems is that nerves are pretty unique histologically. Nerves comprise of the longest cells in the body with many of them spanning the distance from the spinal cord out to the fingers or toes. Although these cells are long they are extremely thin. These thin and long cells come together to form a nerve. Each cell is connected to their respective muscle fibers and control their contraction.

When a nerve is injured or ruptured these cells break, and these connections break too. You don't have a lot of time to connect them back together and if you do it is impossible to connect the nerves absolutely correctly together. So although some function of the nerve might be retained it might, at least at first, be severely impaired. This might be somewhat improved with rehabilitation.

For an analogy you could imagine a doorbell with the wires joined into one big cable and then branching out to a bunch of different apartments. If you cut on the big common cable and join it randomly together most of the doorbells might work but would ring in the wrong apartment.

Reference: Trehan, S. K., Model, Z., & Lee, S. K. (2016). Nerve repair and nerve grafting. Hand clinics, 32(2), 119-125. doi: 10.1016/j.hcl.2015.12.002 PMID: 27094885

PS: With regard to why surgeons try to avoid injuring nerves that also has to do with avoiding injury to important structures, not just nerves, but also blood vessels, ureters etc.

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