Ward Samuel R, Peace William J, Fridén Jan, Lieber Richard L
Department of Radiology, University of California and Veterans Administration San Diego, San Diego, CA 92161, USA.
J Hand Surg Am. 2006 Jul-Aug;31(6):993-7. doi: 10.1016/j.jhsa.2006.02.025.
To show biomechanically that the brachioradialis (BR) muscle can be transferred to restore key pinch and forearm pronation simultaneously.
Nine fresh-frozen forearms were thawed and instrumented with a custom muscle-tendon excursion jig. Maximum BR muscle-tendon excursion was measured with the wrist and thumb mobile. Muscle-tendon excursion then was measured from 60 degrees of supination to 60 degrees of pronation in 15 degrees increments with the wrist and thumb fixed. Measurements were performed in 3 configurations: the native BR, the BR transferred volarly to the flexor pollicis longus (FPL) tendon, and the BR transferred dorsally (posterior to the radius) through the interosseous membrane to the FPL tendon. Muscle excursion-joint angle data were differentiated to compute pronation/supination moment arms. Two-way analyses of variance and post hoc Tukey tests were used to compare transfer conditions.
Maximum muscle excursion was nearly identical when volar and dorsal transfer conditions were compared. When pronation/supination motions were isolated, however, the volar transfer was associated with muscle shortening and small pronation moment arms through 30 degrees +/- 9 degrees of supination. Importantly, the dorsal transfer was associated with muscle shortening and larger pronation moment arms through 28 degrees +/- 10 degrees of pronation, a significant difference of 58.0 degrees +/- 16.0 degrees compared to the traditional volar transfer.
These data suggest that dorsal BR-to-FPL transfers can power key pinch and forearm pronation simultaneously even in the absence of other functional pronators. This transfer can be accomplished without changes to total muscle excursion compared with the traditional volar BR-to-FPL transfer. This result may enable the use of the BR-to-FPL transfer in patients who need key pinch but who lack functional pronation muscle groups (eg, ocular cutaneous 3). As result a larger patient population may benefit from the BR-to-FPL reconstructive procedure.
通过生物力学方法证明肱桡肌(BR)可被转移以同时恢复关键捏力和前臂旋前功能。
解冻9个新鲜冷冻的前臂,并使用定制的肌腱活动夹具进行器械安装。在腕部和拇指可活动的情况下测量BR肌腱的最大活动度。随后,在腕部和拇指固定的情况下,以15度的增量测量从旋前60度到旋后60度的肌腱活动度。测量在3种配置下进行:天然BR、向掌侧转移至拇长屈肌(FPL)肌腱的BR以及通过骨间膜向背侧(桡骨后方)转移至FPL肌腱的BR。对肌肉活动度 - 关节角度数据进行微分以计算旋前/旋后力臂。使用双向方差分析和事后Tukey检验比较转移条件。
比较掌侧和背侧转移条件时,最大肌肉活动度几乎相同。然而,当分离旋前/旋后运动时,掌侧转移在旋前30度±9度范围内与肌肉缩短和较小的旋前力臂相关。重要的是,背侧转移在旋后28度±10度范围内与肌肉缩短和较大的旋前力臂相关,与传统掌侧转移相比,差异显著,为58.0度±16.0度。
这些数据表明,即使在没有其他功能性旋前肌的情况下,背侧BR至FPL转移也可同时为关键捏力和前臂旋前提供动力。与传统的掌侧BR至FPL转移相比,这种转移可以在不改变总肌肉活动度的情况下完成。这一结果可能使BR至FPL转移可用于需要关键捏力但缺乏功能性旋前肌群的患者(例如,眼皮肤型3型)。因此,更多患者可能受益于BR至FPL重建手术。