The Journal of hand surgery
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Comparative Study Clinical Trial
A model instrument for the documentation of outcome after nerve repair.
We present a new model for documentation and quantification of the functional outcome after nerve repair at the wrist or distal forearm level and a protocol that includes a numerical scoring system. The model, presented here along with validation and reliability test results, supports our hypothesis that the summarized test results reflecting specific functional limitations correlates well with the patient's opinion of the impact of the nerve injury on activities of daily living. Seventy patients with nerve repair were examined using the protocol. ⋯ Analysis of internal consistency demonstrated good homogeneity. A calculated total score correlated strongly with the patients' global estimation of the impact of the injury on activities of daily living and the summary of sensory and pain/discomfort domains correlated significantly with the Medical Research Council S0-S4 scale. The presented model represents a useful new tool for evaluation of the functional outcome after nerve injury and repair.
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The current literature universally suggests that submuscular anterior transposition is the standard operative treatment for recurrent cubital tunnel syndrome. Regardless of the type of initial failed procedure, including submuscular transposition, 20 patients underwent anterior subcutaneous transposition of the ulnar nerve. All patients were monitored for a minimum of 2 years after surgery. ⋯ Relief of pain and paresthesias were the most consistent favorable results. Fair and poor outcomes were significantly associated with increasing age and the number of previous surgeries. Subcutaneous anterior transposition of the ulnar nerve proved to be an effective treatment for recurrent cubital tunnel syndrome.
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In spite of an enormous amount of new experimental laboratory data based on evolving neuroscientific concepts during the last 25 years peripheral nerve injuries still belong to the most challenging and difficult surgical reconstructive problems. Our understanding of biological mechanisms regulating posttraumatic nerve regeneration has increased substantially with respect to the role of neurotrophic and neurite-outgrowth promoting substances, but new molecular biological knowledge has so far gained very limited clinical applications. Techniques for clinical approximation of severed nerve ends have reached an optimal technical refinement and new concepts are needed to further increase the results from nerve repair. ⋯ However, evolving principles for immunosuppression may open new perspectives regarding the use of nerve allografts, and various types of tissue engineering combined by bioartificial conduits may also be important. Posttraumatic functional reorganizations occurring in brain cortex are key phenomena explaining much of the inferior functional outcome following nerve repair, and increased knowledge regarding factors involved in brain plasticity may help to further improve the results. Implantation of microchips in the nervous system may provide a new interface between biology and technology and developing gene technology may introduce new possibilities in the manipulation of nerve degeneration and regeneration.
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Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Peripheral tears of the triangular fibrocartilage complex cause distal radioulnar joint instability after distal radial fractures.
The aim of this prospective study was to determine whether peripheral tears of the triangular fibrocartilage complex (TFCC) in patients younger than the osteoporotic age (males,<60 years; females, <50 years) were related to chronic distal radioulnar joint (DRUJ) instability. Fifty-one patients (27 women) with displaced distal radial fractures were included in the study. The median age was 41 years (range, 20-57 years). ⋯ Patients with instability of the DRUJ had a worse Gartland and Werley wrist score. Instability was not associated with any radiographic finding either at the time of fracture or at the follow-up examination. Initial fracture or nonunion of the styloid was even slightly more common in stable patients.
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Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Ulnar nerve function following total elbow arthroplasty: a prospective study comparing preoperative and postoperative clinical and electrophysiologic evaluation in patients with rheumatoid arthritis.
A study was conducted to determine the incidence of ulnar and peripheral neuropathy in patients with rheumatoid arthritis undergoing total elbow arthroplasty and the effect it has on ulnar nerve function after surgery. Preoperative and postoperative clinical and electrodiagnostic examinations were completed in 10 patients. Before surgery 4 patients had clinical and electrophysiologic evidence of a neuropathy (2 each with a peripheral neuropathy and an ulnar neuropathy). ⋯ We found that a large percentage of patients (40%) with rheumatoid arthritis had evidence of ulnar or peripheral neuropathy before surgery. The presence of an ulnar or peripheral neuropathy did not predispose patients to develop postoperative ulnar nerve dysfunction either clinically or electrophysiologically. Preoperative and postoperative physical and electrodiagnostic examination results correlated in 9 of the 10 patients.