[QUOTE=Dragwyr]
I recently cut my left thumb across the pad on a very sharp knife last week. It was a very deep cut requiring 5 stitches. They stitches came out today and I told the doctor that most of the pad of my thumb is still numb. He is going to refer me to a hand specialist because he thinks there might be some nerve damage.
My question is do nerves that are damaged like this grow back or repair themselves? I’ve been told that nerve tissue doesn’t grow back, but I’ve also been told by a few people that it will grow back, but very very slowly. I’ve tried looking this up on the net and found nothing that really relates to my question.
So which is it? Do I have any hope of getting the feeling back in the tip and pad of my left thumb?
(Disclaimer: I am not a doctor and I start this thread with the knowledge that people here are not medical professionals. I fully intend on seeing my hand specialist on this and doing what he recommends.)
[/QUOTE]
The digital nerves which supply the thumb run in two main bundles along the volar (underside) aspect of the the thum on each side. A cut does not have to be particularly deep to cut one of the digital nerve bundles.
When a digital nerve is severed, the digit involved loses sensation along that side of the digit; innervation to the pad is shared by nerves which cross over from each side. One of the ways we tell how severe the injury to the nerve is is by testing your ability to discriminate one point from two.
Ideally, digital nerves severed fairly near the base of the digit are repaired within a few days of the injury. Under a microscope, the nerve bundle is sewed up like putting together the two walls of a severed cylinder. Inside of this, the nerve itself will still degenerate–perhaps all the way back to the spinal column. However the nerve cells themselves do not die, and they will grow new axons to the right place as long as the channel–the bundle shell–has been repaired. This may take several months because the nerves regenerate their axons slowly, on the order of a millimeter a day.
Without a proper repair, the extent and quality of re-innervation is variable, and heavily dependent on how severe the transection of the digital nerve bundle was. The outside of the thumb is slightly more critical than the side of it next to the index finger, because this helps remind the hand and thumb where it has been placed.
A hand doctor is the right place to be, so you are in good hands. 