Twenty-six patients who had an infected nonunion or segmental defect of the tibia with skin loss were treated in one stage with debridement and a free vascularized osteocutaneous fibula or iliac graft. Successful control of infection, closure of skin defects, and incorporation of bone union were achieved in all patients except one. In an average follow-up of 39 months, no recurrence of infection was seen. There were four stress fractures of the grafted fibula; these healed within 2 months with cast immobilization. Graft hypertrophy was common in the fibula grafts, but it took 1 1/2 years for hypertrophy of the graft to be strong enough to remove external supports without stress fracture or an additional cancellous bone graft. The use of a one-stage free vascularized osteocutaneous graft for the management of infected bone defects of the tibia with skin loss is effective because extensive debridement can remove all devitalized and infected tissue and can increase vascularity in the region of infection and osseous defect to enhance antibiotic delivery.
Thirty-one patients with complete avulsion of the brachial plexus underwent reconstruction of elbow extension by intercostal nerve transfer following reconstruction of prehension with either a single or double free-muscle transfer. Long-term results of elbow extension were evaluated in 24 patients. Reinnervation of the triceps muscle took longer than that of the transferred muscle on serial electromyographic examinations, and the eventual strength of the triceps muscle was weak. None attained M5 grade, 2 achieved M4 grade, 4 achieved M3 grade, 8 achieved M2 grade, 5 achieved M1 grade, and another 5 achieved M0 grade. However, despite the weak recovery, 14 patients were able to obtain useful functional recovery of the triceps muscle, enabling it to stabilize the elbow joint against the transferred muscle, which acted as simultaneous elbow flexor and wrist or finger extensor. Elbow stability is imperative in order to obtain voluntary finger function following free-muscle transfer. Should the triceps muscle fail to recover following intercostal nerves neurotization, transferring the reinnervated infraspinatus to the triceps is an optional procedure to provide stabilization of the elbow.
Limb-sparing surgery is the preferred approach in the management of patients with high-grade soft-tissue sarcomas when local disease can be completely resected. However, conventional treatment focuses only on restoration of basic functions to the remnant limb. Lost functions are not restored to normal, leaving the patient with variable degrees of functional disabilities. This in turn may necessitate further massive reconstructive procedures. Transferred reinnervated free muscles were used to reconstruct functions lost after radical resection of malignant soft-tissue sarcoma of the extremities in 17 patients. The long-term functional outcome included survival of transplanted muscle, speed of neural recovery, and muscle strength and disabilities. All muscles survived. Postoperative follow-up ranged from 27 to 106 months. All muscles except those in a 75-year-old patient were successfully reinnervated. Powerful strength and almost normal limb functions were obtained. Functional scoring of the patients according to the rating system of the Musculoskeletal Tumor Society was 87 percent for the lower extremity and 93 percent for the upper extremity. All patients are presently disease-free. Use of the reinnervated free-muscle transfer in limb-sparing surgery after resection of soft-tissue sarcoma in the extremity may be indicated in the young adult when radical excision of the tumor will result in severe motor functional loss, provided adequate clearance can be obtained and that there is no presence of distant metastasis.
The sural nerve was described as a new donor nerve of the free vascularized nerve graft in a fresh cadaver's dissection and in four clinical cases. The vascularized sural nerve is nourished by the cutaneous branch of the peroneal artery or the muscular perforating branch of the posterior tibial artery in our grafts. Compared to other vascularized nerve grafts, the sural nerve has many advantages: 1) A "two- or three-fold nerve graft" can be designed on itself without damage to the blood supply of the nerve, 2) survival of the nerve can be reasoned by the accompanying flap and the flap can close the skin defect simultaneously without additional vascular anastomosis, and 3) sensory loss at the donor site is negligible. The final extent of sensory recovery in our clinical cases could require several months, but a quickly advanced Tinel's sign suggested the technique's superiority.
One pattern of injury to the brachial plexus shows recovery of the fifth and sixth cervical nerves but little else. These patients have useful shoulders and functional elbow flexion, but elbow and wrist extension is weak or absent. Their hand function is negligible. We restored hand function in three such patients using free functioning muscle transfer for finger flexion and transfer of the sensory rami of the intercostal nerve to the ulnar nerve for sensation. Supplementary operations to restore elbow and wrist extension were necessary in one patient.
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