Department of Plastic Surgery, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH.
Division of Plastic Surgery, Northwestern Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL.
J Am Coll Surg. 2019 Mar;228(3):217-226. doi: 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2018.12.015. Epub 2019 Jan 8.
A majority of the nearly 2 million Americans living with limb loss suffer from chronic pain in the form of neuroma-related residual limb and phantom limb pain (PLP). Targeted muscle reinnervation (TMR) surgically transfers amputated nerves to nearby motor nerves for prevention of neuroma. The objective of this study was to determine whether TMR at the time of major limb amputation decreases the incidence and severity of PLP and residual limb pain.
A multi-institutional cohort study was conducted between 2012 and 2018. Fifty-one patients undergoing major limb amputation with immediate TMR were compared with 438 unselected major limb amputees. Primary outcomes included an 11-point Numerical Rating Scale (NRS) and Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) pain intensity, behavior, and interference.
Patients who underwent TMR had less PLP and residual limb pain compared with untreated amputee controls, across all subgroups and by all measures. Median "worst pain in the past 24 hours" for the TMR cohort was 1 out of 10 compared to 5 (PLP) and 4 (residual) out of 10 in the control population (p = 0.003 and p < 0.001, respectively). Median PROMIS t-scores were lower in TMR patients for both PLP (pain intensity [36.3 vs 48.3], pain behavior [50.1 vs 56.6], and pain interference [40.7 vs 55.8]) and residual limb pain (pain intensity [30.7 vs 46.8], pain behavior [36.7 vs 57.3], and pain interference [40.7 vs 57.3]). Targeted muscle reinnervation was associated with 3.03 (PLP) and 3.92 (residual) times higher odds of decreasing pain severity compared with general amputee participants.
Preemptive surgical intervention of amputated nerves with TMR at the time of limb loss should be strongly considered to reduce pathologic phantom limb pain and symptomatic neuroma-related residual limb pain.
近 200 万肢体缺失的美国人中,大多数都患有神经瘤相关残肢痛和幻肢痛(PLP)的慢性疼痛。靶向肌肉神经再支配(TMR)手术将切断的神经转移到附近的运动神经,以预防神经瘤。本研究旨在确定在肢体大截肢时进行 TMR 是否会降低 PLP 和残肢痛的发生率和严重程度。
这是一项 2012 年至 2018 年期间进行的多机构队列研究。51 例接受肢体大截肢伴即刻 TMR 的患者与 438 例未经选择的肢体大截肢患者进行比较。主要结局包括 11 点数字评分量表(NRS)和患者报告的结局测量信息系统(PROMIS)疼痛强度、行为和干扰。
与未经治疗的截肢对照组相比,接受 TMR 的患者在所有亚组和所有测量中,PLP 和残肢痛均较少。TMR 组的“过去 24 小时内最剧烈疼痛”中位数为 1/10,而对照组分别为 5/10(PLP)和 4/10(残肢)(p=0.003 和 p<0.001)。TMR 患者的 PROMIS t 评分在 PLP(疼痛强度[36.3 比 48.3]、疼痛行为[50.1 比 56.6]和疼痛干扰[40.7 比 55.8])和残肢痛(疼痛强度[30.7 比 46.8]、疼痛行为[36.7 比 57.3]和疼痛干扰[40.7 比 57.3])方面均较低。与一般截肢参与者相比,靶向肌肉神经再支配与疼痛严重程度降低 3.03 倍(PLP)和 3.92 倍(残肢)相关。
在肢体丧失时,通过 TMR 对切断的神经进行预防性手术干预,应强烈考虑以降低病理性幻肢痛和症状性神经瘤相关残肢痛的发生率。