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Staged Phrenic Nerve Elongation and Free Functional Gracilis Muscle Transplantation–A Possible Option for Late Reconstruction in Chronic Brachial Plexus Injury

Authors :
Abraham, Zavala
Johnny, Chuieng-Yi Lu
Nicole A, Zelenski
Tommy, Nai-Jen Chang
David, Chwei-Chin Chuang
Source :
The Journal of Hand Surgery.
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

In patients with late brachial plexus birth injuries, sequelae after acute flaccid myelitis, or chronic adult brachial plexus injury, donor nerves for functioning muscle transplantation are often scarce. We present the results of a potential strategy using the phrenic nerve with staged free gracilis transplantation for upper extremity reanimation in these scenarios.A retrospective review was performed on an institutional database of brachial plexus injury or patients with palsy. All patients underwent a staged reconstruction in which the ipsilateral phrenic nerve was extended by an autogenous nerve graft (PhNG), followed by free-functioning gracilis transplantation (PhNG-gracilis).Nine patients (6 cases of late brachial plexus birth injuries, 2 of acute flaccid myelitis, and 1 of adult chronic brachial plexus injury) were included in this study. The median follow-up period following the PhNG-gracilis procedure was 27 months (range, 12-72 months). The goals of the staged PhNG and PhNG-gracilis were primarily finger extension or finger flexion. In some patients, the technique was used to improve both elbow and finger function, tunneling the muscle through the flexor compartment of the upper arm and under the mobile wad at the elbow. All patients exhibited improvement of muscle strength, including in finger extension (4 patients) from M0 to M2; finger flexion (3 patients) from M0 to M3; elbow extension (1 patient) from M0 to M2; and elbow flexion (1 patient) from M2 to M4.A 2-stage PhNG-gracilis may restore or enhance the residual elbow and/or finger paralysis in chronic brachial plexus injuries. A minimum follow-up period of 3 years is recommended. This technique may remain useful as one of the last reconstructive options to increase power in patients with scarce donor nerves.Therapeutic V.

Details

ISSN :
03635023
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Hand Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1b4c7e203b779c70b627975eeede3fd0