Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Northwestern University, Chicago, Illinois.
Center for Bionic Medicine, Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois ; Department of Biomedical Engineering, Northwestern University, Chicago, Illinois.
Semin Plast Surg. 2015 Feb;29(1):62-72. doi: 10.1055/s-0035-1544166.
Targeted muscle reinnervation (TMR) is a surgical procedure used to improve the control of upper limb prostheses. Residual nerves from the amputated limb are transferred to reinnervate new muscle targets that have otherwise lost their function. These reinnervated muscles then serve as biological amplifiers of the amputated nerve motor signals, allowing for more intuitive control of advanced prosthetic arms. Here the authors provide a review of surgical techniques for TMR in patients with either transhumeral or shoulder disarticulation amputations. They also discuss how TMR may act synergistically with recent advances in prosthetic arm technologies to improve prosthesis controllability. Discussion of TMR and prosthesis control is presented in the context of a 41-year-old man with a left-side shoulder disarticulation and a right-side transhumeral amputation. This patient underwent bilateral TMR surgery and was fit with advanced pattern-recognition myoelectric prostheses.
靶向肌肉神经再支配(TMR)是一种用于改善上肢假肢控制的手术。将来自截肢肢体的残留神经转移到重新支配已经失去功能的新肌肉靶标。这些重新支配的肌肉充当截肢神经运动信号的生物放大器,从而可以更直观地控制先进的假肢手臂。在这里,作者综述了用于经肱骨或肩部离断截肢患者的 TMR 手术技术。他们还讨论了 TMR 如何与最近在假肢手臂技术方面的进展协同作用,以提高假肢的可控性。在一位 41 岁男性的背景下讨论了 TMR 和假肢控制,该患者左侧肩部离断,右侧肱骨截肢。该患者接受了双侧 TMR 手术,并配备了先进的模式识别肌电假肢。