| Literature DB >> 27166768 |
Yi Yang1, Xue-Jun Zou2, Guo Fu1, Ben-Gang Qin1, Jian-Tao Yang1, Xiang-Ming Li3, Yi Hou1, Jian Qi1, Ping Li1, Xiao-Lin Liu1, Li-Qiang Gu1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the feasibility of using free gracilis muscle transfer along with the brachialis muscle branch of the musculocutaneous nerve to restore finger and thumb flexion in lower trunk brachial plexus injury according to an anatomical study and a case report.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27166768 PMCID: PMC4825193 DOI: 10.6061/clinics/2016(04)03
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clinics (Sao Paulo) ISSN: 1807-5932 Impact factor: 2.365
Figure 1Photograph showing the nerve branching from the musculocutaneous nerve that innervates the brachialis muscle. Musculocutaneous nerve; Brachialis muscle branch of musculocutaneous nerve; Median nerve; Lateral antebrachial cutaneous nerve.
Figure 2Photographs showing that the strength of finger and thumb flexion was M0.
Figure 3The preoperative surgical plan. Musculocutaneous nerve; Brachialis muscle; Gracilis muscle; flexion.
Figure 4The gracilis was harvested along with the anterior branch of the obturator nerve and its vascular supply. A skin paddle was designed to facilitate postoperative flap monitoring (a). The harvested gracilis was placed beside the left arm (b). The harvested gracilis was placed inside the left forearm (c). The anterior branch of the obturator nerve of the gracilis was anastomosed to the brachialis muscle branch of the musculocutaneous nerve (arrow indicates the site of the anastomosis) (d). Schematic diagram of the operation (e).
The measurements of the brachialis muscle branch of the musculocutaneous nerve (mean±SD, mm).
| Items | Left (n=15) | Right (n=15) | Total (n=30) | t-value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Length | 52.60±6.62 | 52.72±6.50 | 52.66±6.45 | 0.52 | 0.609 |
| Diameter | 1.38±0.09 | 1.39±0.10 | 1.39±0.09 | 0.397 | 0.698 |
| Distance | 139.3±15.3 | 139.5±15.4 | 139.4±15.1 | 1.226 | 0.242 |
Distance of the brachialis muscle branch of the musculocutaneous nerve origin to the midpoint of the humeral condylar.
Branching type of the brachialis muscle branch of the musculocutaneous nerve.
| Types | Left (n=15) | Right (n=15) | Total (n=30) |
| Type I, single branch | 14 | 11 | 25(83.33%) |
| Type II, double branches | 0 | 1 | 1(3.33%) |
| Type III, multiple branches | 1 | 3 | 4(13.33%) |
BMBMCN = brachialis muscle branch of the musculocutaneous nerve.
Figure 5Photographs showing that the transection of the brachialis muscle branch of the musculocutaneous nerve did not cause functional impairment of the elbow when the cast was removed after the first month (a, b). One year after the operation, a noticeable improvement was observed in digit flexion due to gracilis contraction (arrow). The muscle power was M4 (c, d).