TY - JOUR KW - Activities of Daily Living KW - Adolescent KW - Adult KW - Ankle KW - Female KW - Humans KW - leprosy KW - Male KW - Muscle, Skeletal KW - Nerve Regeneration KW - Quality of Life KW - Transplantation, Autologous KW - Treatment Outcome KW - Ulcer KW - Wrist AU - Pereira J H AU - Palande D D AU - Narayanakumar T S AU - Subramanian A S AU - Gschmeissner S AU - Wilkinson M AB -

A total of 38 patients with leprosy and localised nerve damage (11 median at the wrist and 37 posterior tibial at the ankle) were treated by 48 freeze-thawed skeletal muscle autografts ranging between 2.5 cm and 14 cm in length. Sensory recovery was noted in 34 patients (89%) and was maintained during a mean period of follow-up of 12.6 years (4 to 14). After grafting the median nerve all patients remained free of ulcers and blisters, ten demonstrated perception of texture and eight recognised weighted pins. In the posterior tibial nerve group, 24 of 30 repairs (80%) resulted in improved healing of the ulcers and 26 (87%) demonstrated discrimination of texture. Quality of life and hand and foot questionnaires showed improvement; the activities of daily living scores improved in six of seven after operations on the hand, and in 14 of 22 after procedures on the foot. Another benefit was subjective improvement in the opposite limb, probably because of the protective effect of better function in the operated side. This study demonstrates that nerve/muscle interposition grafting in leprosy results in consistent sensory recovery and high levels of patient satisfaction. Ten of 11 patients with hand operations and 22 of 25 with procedures to the foot showed sensory recovery in at least one modality.

BT - The Journal of bone and joint surgery. British volume C1 - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18256092?dopt=Abstract DA - 2008 Feb DO - 10.1302/0301-620X.90B2.19586 IS - 2 J2 - J Bone Joint Surg Br LA - eng N2 -

A total of 38 patients with leprosy and localised nerve damage (11 median at the wrist and 37 posterior tibial at the ankle) were treated by 48 freeze-thawed skeletal muscle autografts ranging between 2.5 cm and 14 cm in length. Sensory recovery was noted in 34 patients (89%) and was maintained during a mean period of follow-up of 12.6 years (4 to 14). After grafting the median nerve all patients remained free of ulcers and blisters, ten demonstrated perception of texture and eight recognised weighted pins. In the posterior tibial nerve group, 24 of 30 repairs (80%) resulted in improved healing of the ulcers and 26 (87%) demonstrated discrimination of texture. Quality of life and hand and foot questionnaires showed improvement; the activities of daily living scores improved in six of seven after operations on the hand, and in 14 of 22 after procedures on the foot. Another benefit was subjective improvement in the opposite limb, probably because of the protective effect of better function in the operated side. This study demonstrates that nerve/muscle interposition grafting in leprosy results in consistent sensory recovery and high levels of patient satisfaction. Ten of 11 patients with hand operations and 22 of 25 with procedures to the foot showed sensory recovery in at least one modality.

PY - 2008 SP - 220 EP - 4 T2 - The Journal of bone and joint surgery. British volume TI - Nerve repair by denatured muscle autografts promotes sustained sensory recovery in leprosy. VL - 90 SN - 2044-5377 ER -