Wade Sean M, Harrington Colin J, Hoyt Benjamin W, Melendez-Munoz Angelica M, Potter Benjamin K, Souza Jason M
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, Bethesda, MD 20889, USA.
Henry M. Jackson Foundation for the Advancement of Military Medicine, Inc., Bethesda, MD 20889, USA.
Mil Med. 2023 Mar 20;188(3-4):e584-e590. doi: 10.1093/milmed/usab403.
As the combat operational tempo of the military conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan has declined over the last decade, there has been a decrease in the number of patients requiring acute limb salvage. In their place, a growing population of patients with persistent functional deficits, pain, and inadequate soft tissue coverage stemming from prior limb salvage strategies have returned to our institution seeking revision surgery. Herein, we examine our institution's evolving surgical approach to extremity reconstruction from 2011 through 2019, culminating in the development of our limb restoration concept. We also discuss the impact of this orthoplastic approach on the acute management of complex extremity trauma and its role in providing sustained surgical readiness during interwar years.
We retrospectively reviewed all limb reconstructive procedures performed at our tertiary care military treatment facility between September 1, 2011 to December 31, 2019 to characterize the trends in extremity reconstruction procedures performed at our institution. Cases were identified as limb restoration procedures if they involved secondary/revision reconstructive procedures designed to optimize function, treat pain, or improve the durability of the injured extremity following initial reconstruction efforts.
Nearly 500 limb restoration procedures were performed during the study period. These procedures steadily increased since 2011, reaching a maximum of 120 in 2018. Orthoplastic procedures such as osseointegration, targeted muscle reinnervation, regenerative peripheral nerve interface, agonist-antagonist myoneural interface, and soft tissue resurfacing flap reconstruction accounted for the rise in secondary/revision reconstruction performed during this time period.
Limb restoration is a collaborative orthoplastic approach that utilizes state-of-the-art surgical techniques for treating complex extremity trauma. Although limb restoration originally developed in response to managing the long-term sequelae of combat extremity trauma, the concept can be adapted to the acute management setting. Moreover, limb restoration provides military surgeons with a means for maintaining critical war-time surgical skills during the current low casualty rate era. Level of Evidence: V, therapeutic.
在过去十年中,伊拉克和阿富汗军事冲突的作战节奏有所下降,需要进行急性肢体挽救的患者数量也随之减少。取而代之的是,越来越多因先前的肢体挽救策略而出现持续功能缺陷、疼痛和软组织覆盖不足的患者回到我们机构寻求翻修手术。在此,我们研究了2011年至2019年期间我们机构不断演变的肢体重建手术方法,最终形成了我们的肢体修复理念。我们还讨论了这种整形手术方法对复杂肢体创伤急性处理的影响及其在战争间歇期保持持续手术准备状态中的作用。
我们回顾性分析了2011年9月1日至2019年12月31日期间在我们的三级军事医疗中心进行的所有肢体重建手术,以确定我们机构进行的肢体重建手术趋势。如果病例涉及旨在优化功能、治疗疼痛或提高初次重建后受伤肢体耐用性的二次/翻修重建手术,则将其确定为肢体修复手术。
在研究期间共进行了近500例肢体修复手术。自2011年以来,这些手术稳步增加,2018年达到最多120例。骨整合、靶向肌肉再支配、再生周围神经接口、主动-拮抗肌神经接口和软组织覆盖皮瓣重建等整形手术导致了这一时期二次/翻修重建手术的增加。
肢体修复是一种协作性的整形手术方法,利用先进的手术技术治疗复杂的肢体创伤。虽然肢体修复最初是为了应对战斗性肢体创伤的长期后遗症而发展起来的,但这一理念可应用于急性处理环境。此外,肢体修复为军事外科医生在当前低伤亡率时代提供了一种保持关键战时手术技能的方法。证据级别:V,治疗性。