Fox Ida K, Davidge Kristen M, Novak Christine B, Hoben Gwendolyn, Kahn Lorna C, Juknis Neringa, Ruvinskaya Rimma, Mackinnon Susan E
St. Louis, Mo.; and Toronto, Ontario, Canada From the Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Department of Surgery, the Division of Neurorehabilitation, Spinal Cord Injury Program, and the Department of Neurology, Washington University School of Medicine; the Milliken Hand Center of The Rehabilitation Institute of Saint Louis; and the Hand and Upper Extremity Program, Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Hospital for Sick Children.
Plast Reconstr Surg. 2015 Oct;136(4):780-792. doi: 10.1097/PRS.0000000000001641.
Cervical spinal cord injury can result in profound loss of upper extremity function. Recent interest in the use of nerve transfers to restore volitional control is an exciting development in the care of these complex patients. In this article, the authors review preliminary results of nerve transfers in spinal cord injury.
Review of the literature and the authors' cases series of 13 operations in nine spinal cord injury nerve transfer recipients was performed. Representative cases were reviewed to explore critical concepts and preliminary outcomes.
The nerve transfers used expendable donors (e.g., teres minor, deltoid, supinator, and brachialis) innervated above the level of the spinal cord injury to restore volitional control of missing function such as elbow extension, wrist extension, and/or hand function (posterior interosseous nerve or anterior interosseous nerve/finger flexors reinnervated). Results from the literature and the authors' patients (after a mean postsurgical follow-up of 12 months) indicate gains in function as assessed by both manual muscle testing and patients' self-reported outcomes measures.
Nerve transfers can provide an alternative and consistent means of reestablishing volitional control of upper extremity function in people with cervical level spinal cord injury. Early outcomes provide evidence of substantial improvements in self-reported function despite relatively subtle objective gains in isolated muscle strength. Further work to investigate the optimal timing and combination of nerve transfer operations, the combination of these with traditional treatments (tendon transfer and functional electrical stimulation), and measurement of outcomes is imperative for determining the precise role of these operations.
CLINICAL QUESTION/LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Therapeutic, IV.
颈髓损伤可导致上肢功能严重丧失。近期,利用神经移植来恢复自主控制功能的研究成为这类复杂患者治疗中的一项令人振奋的进展。在本文中,作者回顾了脊髓损伤神经移植的初步结果。
对文献进行综述,并回顾了作者所做的9例脊髓损伤神经移植受者的13例手术病例系列。对代表性病例进行分析,以探讨关键概念和初步结果。
神经移植采用脊髓损伤平面以上的可牺牲供体(如小圆肌、三角肌、旋后肌和肱肌)来恢复诸如肘伸展、腕伸展和/或手部功能(骨间后神经或骨间前神经/指屈肌重新获得神经支配)等缺失功能的自主控制。文献及作者患者(术后平均随访12个月)的结果表明,通过徒手肌力测试和患者自我报告的结果评估,功能均有改善。
神经移植可为颈段脊髓损伤患者重建上肢功能的自主控制提供一种替代且可靠的方法。早期结果表明,尽管孤立肌肉力量的客观改善相对不明显,但自我报告的功能有显著改善。进一步研究神经移植手术的最佳时机和组合、其与传统治疗方法(肌腱移植和功能性电刺激)的联合应用以及结果测量,对于确定这些手术的确切作用至关重要。
临床问题/证据级别:治疗性,IV级。