Division of Plastic Surgery, Northwestern Feinberg School of Medicine and Neural Engineering Center for Artificial Limbs, 675 N St Clair, Suite 19-250, Chicago, IL, 60610, USA.
Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2014 Oct;472(10):2984-90. doi: 10.1007/s11999-014-3528-7.
Postamputation neuroma pain can prevent comfortable prosthesis wear in patients with limb amputations, and currently available treatments are not consistently effective. Targeted muscle reinnervation (TMR) is a decade-old technique that employs a series of novel nerve transfers to permit intuitive control of upper-limb prostheses. Clinical experience suggests that it may also serve as an effective therapy for postamputation neuroma pain; however, this has not been explicitly studied.
QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: We evaluated the effect of TMR on residual limb neuroma pain in upper-extremity amputees.
We conducted a retrospective medical record review of all 28 patients treated with TMR from 2002 to 2012 at Northwestern Memorial Hospital/Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago (Chicago, IL, USA) and San Antonio Military Medical Center (San Antonio, TX, USA). Twenty-six of 28 patients had sufficient (> 6 months) followup for study inclusion. The amputation levels were shoulder disarticulation (10 patients) and transhumeral (16 patients). All patients underwent TMR for the primary purpose of improved myoelectric control. Of the 26 patients included in the study, 15 patients had evidence of postamputation neuroma pain before undergoing TMR.
Of the 15 patients presenting with neuroma pain before TMR, 14 experienced complete resolution of pain in the transferred nerves, and the remaining patient's pain improved (though did not resolve). None of the patients who presented without evidence of postamputation neuroma pain developed neuroma pain after the TMR procedure. All 26 patients were fitted with a prosthesis, and 23 of the 26 patients were able to operate a TMR-controlled prosthesis.
None of the 26 patients who underwent TMR demonstrated evidence of new neuroma pain after the procedure, and all but one of the 15 patients who presented with preoperative neuroma pain experienced complete relief of pain in the distribution of the transferred nerves. TMR offers a novel and potentially more effective therapy for the management of neuroma pain after limb amputation.
截肢后的神经瘤疼痛会妨碍患者佩戴舒适的假肢,而目前可用的治疗方法并不总是有效。靶向肌肉再神经支配(TMR)是一种有十年历史的技术,它采用一系列新的神经转移来实现对上肢假肢的直观控制。临床经验表明,它也可能是治疗截肢后神经瘤疼痛的有效方法;然而,这并没有得到明确的研究。
问题/目的:我们评估了 TMR 对上肢截肢患者残肢神经瘤疼痛的影响。
我们对 2002 年至 2012 年期间在西北纪念医院/芝加哥康复研究所(芝加哥,IL,美国)和圣安东尼奥军事医疗中心(圣安东尼奥,TX,美国)接受 TMR 治疗的 28 名患者的医疗记录进行了回顾性研究。28 名患者中有 26 名患者的随访时间超过 6 个月,符合研究纳入标准。截肢部位为肩关节离断(10 例)和肱骨离断(16 例)。所有患者均因改善肌电控制而接受 TMR 治疗。在纳入研究的 26 名患者中,15 名患者在接受 TMR 前有神经瘤疼痛的证据。
在接受 TMR 前有神经瘤疼痛的 15 名患者中,14 名患者在转移神经中完全缓解疼痛,其余患者的疼痛有所改善(尽管未完全缓解)。在接受 TMR 手术后,没有出现新的神经瘤疼痛的患者。所有 26 名患者都配备了假肢,26 名患者中有 23 名能够操作 TMR 控制的假肢。
在接受 TMR 治疗的 26 名患者中,没有出现新的神经瘤疼痛的证据,在接受 TMR 治疗前有神经瘤疼痛的 15 名患者中,除 1 名患者外,其余患者转移神经分布区的疼痛完全缓解。TMR 为治疗肢体截肢后的神经瘤疼痛提供了一种新的、潜在更有效的治疗方法。