1. Nerve regeneration conduit from inverted human umbilical cord vessel in the treatment of proper palmar digital nerve sections
- Author
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L. Ardouin, F.-A. Lecoq, F. Verstreken, B. Vanmierlo, L. Erhard, V. Locquet, L. Barnouin, J. Bosc, and L. Obert
- Subjects
Rehabilitation ,Quality of Life ,Humans ,Pain ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Surgery ,Recovery of Function ,Nerve Regeneration ,Umbilical Cord - Abstract
Treatment of digital nerve injuries, particularly in case of a gap, is challenging. Recovery of finger sensitivity is often incomplete and can impair personal and occupational activity. The need for better nerve regeneration has given rise to alternative treatments such as nerve conduits. This study aimed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of a conduit of freeze-dried inverted human umbilical cord vessel for regeneration in digital nerve section. Twenty-three patients with a mean nerve gap of 6.11 mm (range 2-30 mm and static 2-point discrimination (s2PD) 15 mm underwent surgical repair of digital nerve section using a nerve regeneration conduit. The primary endpoint was recovery of sensitivity after conduit implantation. Secondary endpoints comprised progression of pain, functional symptoms, pressure threshold, hand-specific symptoms and disabilities, and restored innervation. Mean follow-up was 10.1 ± 4.1 months (range 1-14 months). Sensitivity recovered progressively in the months following implantation. There was a mean decrease of 8.54 mm in s2PD between baseline and last follow-up (p 0.001). Complete innervation recovered in 83.3% of cases at last follow-up. Pressure threshold and hand-related quality of life improved significantly and symptoms due to nerve sectioning (pain, cold intolerance, hypoesthesia, hyperesthesia) resolved almost completely. There were no safety issues related to the nerve conduit. These results indicate that freeze-dried inverted human umbilical vessels can be a safe and effective option as conduit for digital nerve regeneration.
- Published
- 2022