Autti-Rämö I, Larsen A, Taimo A, von Wendt L
Hospital for Children and Adolescents, Neurology, University of Helsinki, Finland.
Eur J Neurol. 2001 Nov;8 Suppl 5:136-44. doi: 10.1046/j.1468-1331.2001.00046.x.
The aim of this article is to describe our clinical experience in treating muscle imbalance in 49 children with spastic upper extremity involvement. We discuss four cohorts of children treated with botulinum toxin type A (BTX-A), each with different treatment objectives. In the first group, 27 children were treated for functional improvement and, of these, 23 had a positive effect, while four had no objective benefit. In the second group, eight children were treated for purposes of presurgical planning; of these, four were referred for surgery, three continued with serial treatment and one child did not benefit from injection. The third group comprised six children who were treated to improve posture and care: in this group, four children demonstrated clear benefit and two children lost some function subsequent to injection. Finally, a fourth group of seven children were treated after acquired brain injury (three with severe tetraplegia, four with hemiplegia). In this group, all children experienced spasticity relaxation and two children with hemiplegia also gained functional benefit. In terms of adverse events, deterioration of upper extremity function was poorly tolerated but limited to the first 1--3 weeks postinjection. Grip strength or thumb grip were diminished if too high doses were used. Overall, our results with BTX-A were rewarding in children with no fixed contracture, good motor learning capacity and high motivation to train. Additionally, BTX-A treatment has proven valuable for counteracting spasticity in children with acquired brain injury. This treatment modality may not, however, be an appropriate treatment option for all children with severe upper extremity spasticity, due to the shorter duration of effect and the potential reduction in functional abilities seen in this cohort. In all cases, the selection of muscles to be treated needs careful clinical assessment. Dynamic EMG analysis should be performed whenever required to aid muscle selection, especially in children with spasticity combined with dystonia. Evaluation of M-responses suggests that for the forearm muscles, doses of BTX-A above 1.5 U/kg/muscle should not be used.
本文旨在描述我们治疗49例上肢痉挛性脑瘫患儿肌肉失衡的临床经验。我们讨论了四组接受A型肉毒毒素(BTX-A)治疗的患儿,每组有不同的治疗目标。第一组,27例患儿接受治疗以改善功能,其中23例有积极效果,4例无明显益处。第二组,8例患儿接受治疗以用于术前规划;其中4例接受了手术,3例继续接受系列治疗,1例患儿未从注射中获益。第三组包括6例接受治疗以改善姿势和护理的患儿:该组中,4例患儿显示出明显益处,2例患儿在注射后功能有所丧失。最后,第四组7例患儿在获得性脑损伤后接受治疗(3例严重四肢瘫,4例偏瘫)。该组中,所有患儿痉挛均得到缓解,2例偏瘫患儿功能也得到改善。在不良事件方面,上肢功能恶化难以耐受,但仅限于注射后1至3周。如果使用剂量过高,握力或拇指抓握力会减弱。总体而言,对于无固定挛缩、运动学习能力良好且训练积极性高的患儿,我们使用BTX-A的治疗效果良好。此外,BTX-A治疗已被证明对于抵消获得性脑损伤患儿的痉挛有价值。然而,由于该组患儿效果持续时间较短且功能能力可能下降,这种治疗方式可能并非所有严重上肢痉挛患儿的合适治疗选择。在所有情况下,选择要治疗的肌肉需要仔细的临床评估。必要时应进行动态肌电图分析以辅助肌肉选择,尤其是对于合并肌张力障碍的痉挛患儿。M反应评估表明,对于前臂肌肉,不应使用高于1.5 U/kg/肌肉的BTX-A剂量。