| Literature DB >> 34164128 |
Cameron T Cox1, Joash R Suryavanshi1, Bradley O Osemwengie1, Sterling Rosqvist1, Matthew Blue1, Desirae McKee1,2, Brendan J MacKay1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Treatment of patients with traumatic axonotmesis presents challenges. Processed human umbilical cord membrane has been recently developed with improved handling and resorption time compared to other amniotic membrane wraps, and may be beneficial in nerve reconstruction. This study evaluates postoperative outcomes after traumatic peripheral nerve injury after placement of commercially available processed human umbilical cord membrane.Entities:
Keywords: Nerve surgery; nerve wrap; partially transected nerve injury
Year: 2021 PMID: 34164128 PMCID: PMC8188973 DOI: 10.1177/20503121211023356
Source DB: PubMed Journal: SAGE Open Med ISSN: 2050-3121
Summary of clinical cases using processed umbilical cord membrane (PUCM).
| Injury | Nerve surgical procedure | PUCM placement | Coverage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gunshot wound | Ulnar nerve neurolysis | Ulnar nerve | 2 × 4 cm |
| Gunshot wound | Ulnar nerve neurolysis and transposition | Ulnar nerve | 2–3 × 6 cm |
| Gunshot wound | Ulnar nerve neurolysis | Ulnar nerve | 2–3 × 6 cm |
| Gunshot wound | Radial nerve neurolysis | Radial nerve | 3 × 6 cm |
| Ulnar nerve transposition | Ulnar nerve | 3 × 6 cm | |
| Crush injury | Superficial branch radial nerve neurolysis. | Radial nerve | 2 × 4 cm, 3 × 6 cm |
| Crush injury | Sural and superficial peroneal nerve neurolysis | Superficial peroneal nerve | 2–3 × 6 cm |
| Motor vehicle collision | Posterior tibial nerve neurolysis | Posterior tibial nerve | 2 × 4 cm |
| Motor vehicle collision | Ulnar nerve neurolysis and transposition | Ulnar nerve | 3 × 6 cm |
| Motor vehicle collision | Superficial branch of the radial nerve neurolysis | Radial nerve—superficial | 3 × 6 cm |
| Motor vehicle collision | Left ulnar nerve neurolysis and transposition | Ulnar nerve | 2–3 × 6 cm |
| Motorcycle accident | Peroneal nerve neurolysis | Peroneal nerve | 4 × 6 cm |
| ATV accident | Ulnar nerve neurolysis | Ulnar nerve | 3 × 6 cm |
| ATV accident | Digital nerve neurolysis | Digital nerves middle finger | 2 × 4 cm |
| ATV accident | Ulnar nerve transposition | Ulnar nerve | 2–3 × 6 cm |
| Fall from height | Peroneal nerve neurolysis | Peroneal nerve | 2 × 4 cm, 3 × 6 cm |
| Fall from height | Radial nerve neurolysis | Radial nerve | 3 × 6 cm |
| Fall from height | Median nerve neurolysis | Median nerve | 2 × 4 cm, 3 × 6 cm |
| Fall | Ulnar nerve transposition | Ulnar nerve | 3 × 6 cm |
| Median nerve transposition | Median nerve | 3 × 6 cm | |
| Laceration | Median nerve neurolysis | Median nerve | 3 × 6 cm |
ATV: all-terrain vehicle.
Summary of internal control cases (not using processed umbilical cord membrane).
| Injury | Nerve surgical procedure |
|---|---|
| Gunshot wound | Neurolysis of common digital nerves of long, ring, and small digits |
| Gunshot wound | Neurolysis of common digital nerve of index and long digits |
| Crush injury | Dorsal sensory branch of radial nerve neurolysis |
| Crush injury | Neurolysis of digital nerves of thumb, index, and long digits |
| Motor vehicle collision | Open carpal tunnel release |
| Motor vehicle collision | Neurolysis with conduit wrap of common digital nerve of index and long digits |
| Motor vehicle collision | Ulnar nerve transposition |
| Fall | Median nerve neurolysis |
| Avulsion | Ulnar nerve neurolysis |
| Injection (hydraulic oil) | Open carpal tunnel release |
| Laceration | Open carpal tunnel release |
Pain scores in our cohort before surgery, and at 3, 6, and 9 months postop; pain scores from our internal control group; and pain scores from similar procedures in the literature.
| PUCM cohort: VAS pain averages | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Preop pain (n = 19) | 3 Months pain (n = 19) | 6 Months pain (n = 18) | 9 Months pain (n = 13) | |
| Mean | 4.9 | 1.7 | 1.3 | 1.7 |
| SD | ±2.1 | ±2.0 | ±1.4 | ±1.8 |
| 95% confidence interval | (3.96–5.84) | (0.80–2.60) | (0.65–1.95) | (0.72–2.68) |
| Mean absolute change |
|
|
| |
| p-value | ||||
| Internal control group: VAS pain averages | ||||
| Preop pain (n = 11) | 8.3 Months pain (n = 11) | |||
| Mean | 3.7 | 1.8 | ||
| SD | ±3.3 | ±2.2 | ||
| 95% confidence interval | (1.75–5.65) | (0.50–3.10) | ||
| Mean absolute change |
| |||
| p-value |
| |||
| VAS pain score comparisons | ||||
| Study used for comparison | ||||
| PUCM cohort postop follow-up | Lequint et al. (n = 30) | Domeshek et al. (n = 37) | Ido et al. (n = 50) | |
| 3 Months (n = 19) 1.7 ± 2.0 | ||||
| Mean difference | 2.4 | 3.0 | 1.7 | |
| p-value | ||||
| 6 Months (n = 18) 1.3 ± 1.4 | ||||
| Mean difference | 2.8 | 3.4 | 2.1 | |
| p-value | ||||
| 9 Months (n = 13) 1.7 ± 1.8 | ||||
| Mean difference | 2.4 | 3.0 | 1.0 | |
| p-value |
|
|
| |
PUCM: processed human umbilical cord membrane; VAS: visual analog scale.
Negative mean difference values indicate that our cohort had worse pain scores than the comparison study. Significant p-values are in bold.
9-month cohort data were compared with 12-month data in Ido et al. study.
Sensory and range of motion (ROM) recovery scoring scales.[17,24]
| British Medical Research Council Score of Sensory Recovery (Modified by Mackinnon and Dellon)
| S0 (Failure): Absence of sensibility in the autonomous area of the nerve | |
| S1 (Poor): Recovery of deep cutaneous pain and tactile sensibility | ||
| S1+ (Poor): Recovery of superficial pain sensibility | ||
| S2 (Poor): Recovery of some degree of superficial cutaneous pain and tactile sensibility | ||
| S2+ (Poor): As in S2, but with over response | ||
| S3 (Good): Return of pain and tactile sensibility with disappearance of over response, s2PD > 15 mm, m2PD > 7 mm | ||
| S3+ (Very Good): Return of sensibility as in S3 with some recovery of two-point discrimination, s2PD: 7–15 mm, m2PD: 4–7 mm | ||
| S4 (Excellent): Complete recovery, s2PD: 2–6 mm, m2PD: 2–3 mm | ||
| ASSH classification of total active motion (TAM) recovery.
| Excellent | TAM equal to normal side |
| Good | TAM > 75% of normal side | |
| Fair | TAM > 50% of normal side | |
| Poor | TAM < 50% of normal side | |
ASSH: American Society for Surgery of the Hand.
Semmes–Weinstein monofilament testing outcomes.
| Nerve repaired | Time from surgery | Sensation in affected distribution |
|---|---|---|
| Radial nerve | 9 Months | Normal–protective sensation |
| Radial nerve | 9 Months | Hand and digits: normal |
| Radial nerve—superficial | 9 Months | Diminished light touch–protective sensation |
| Ulnar nerve | 9 Months | Normal |
| Ulnar nerve | 9 Months | Diminished light touch–protective sensation |
| Ulnar nerve | 9 Months | Volar: diminished light touch– protective sensation dorsal: normal–diminished light touch |
| Ulnar nerve | 9 Months | Volar: deep pressure |
| Ulnar nerve, median nerve | 9 Months | Normal |
| Median nerve—palmar | 9 Months | Normal–diminished light touch |
| Digital nerves—long finger | 9 Months | Diminished light touch |
| Peroneal nerve—superficial | 9 Months | Diminished light touch–protective sensation |
| Radial nerve—sensory, median nerve | 6 Months | Normal–protective sensation |
| Peroneal nerve | 6 Months | Deep pressure |
| Ulnar nerve | 6 Months | Diminished light touch–no response |
| Radial nerve | 3 Months | Normal–diminished light touch |
| Peroneal nerve | 3 Months | Protective sensation–no response |
| Ulnar nerve | 3 Months | Protective sensation–deep pressure |
| Radial nerve, ulnar nerve | 3 Months | Normal |
SF-36 and DASH scores reported for our cohort and the relevant literature.
| SF-36 scores—cohort | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9 Months (n = 8) | ||||||||
| Physical function | Role limit to physical health | Role limit to emotional problems | Energy/fatigue | Emotional well-being | Social function | Pain | General health | |
| Mean | 59.4 | 46.9 | 66.7 | 51.3 | 70.5 | 65.6 | 56.9 | 73.8 |
| SD | ±27.1 | ±38.4 | ±44.1 | ±21.3 | ±21.0 | ±27.1 | ±14.1 | ±18.7 |
| 95% confidence interval | (40.6–78.2) | (20.3–73.5) | (36.1–97.3) | (36.5–66.1) | (55.9–85.1) | (46.8–84.4) | (47.1–66.7) | (60.8–86.8) |
| Mean absolute change from first form | 0.6 | 36.2 | 0 | 4.4 | 2.6 | 8.6 | 2.5 | 8.8 |
| p-value | 0.941 | 0.188 | 0.838 | 0.778 | 0.872 | 0.618 | 0.915 | 0.490 |
| 6 Months (n = 5) | ||||||||
| Mean | 64.0 | 35.0 | 66.7 | 43.0 | 66.4 | 70.0 | 60.5 | 80.0 |
| SD | ±26.3 | ±25.5 | ±42.2 | ±27.3 | ±13.0 | ±29.2 | ±11.1 | ±19.5 |
| 95% confidence interval | (41.0–87.1) | (12.7–57.4) | (29.7–103.7) | (19.1–66.9) | (55.0–77.8) | (44.4–95.6) | (50.7–70.2) | (62.9–97.1) |
| 3 Months (n = 7) | ||||||||
| Mean | 60.0 | 10.7 | 66.7 | 55.7 | 73.1 | 67.9 | 55.4 | 65.0 |
| SD | ±26.3 | ±25.5 | ±42.2 | ±27.3 | ±13.0 | ±29.2 | ±11.1 | ±19.5 |
| 95% confidence interval | (40.5–79.5) | (8.2–29.6) | (35.4–98.0) | (35.5–75.9) | (63.5–82.7) | (46.3–89.5) | (47.2–63.6) | (50.6–79.5) |
| SF-36 scores—literature | ||||||||
| Novak et al. > 6 months after injury without operative intervention (n = 57) | ||||||||
| Physical function | Role limit to physical health | Role limit to emotional problems | Energy/fatigue | Emotional well-being | Social function | Pain | General health | |
| Mean | 60.0 | 23.0 | 45.0 | 49.0 | 58.0 | 57.0 | 41.0 | 61.0 |
| SD | ±23.0 | ±33.0 | ±43.0 | ±24.0 | ±23.0 | ±30.0 | ±25.0 | ±24.0 |
| DASH scores—cohort | ||||||||
| Study | Mean follow-up | Final percent disability Mean ± SD (95% confidence interval) | Mean absolute improvement from first form (p-value) | |||||
| MacKay et al. | 3 months (n = 7) | 48.9 ± 12.0 (40.0–57.8) | N/A | |||||
| 6 months (n = 5) | 39.0 ± 12.0 (28.5–49.5) | 9.9 (p = 0.098) | ||||||
| 9 months (n = 8) | 22.9 ± 19.2 (9.60–36.2) | 36.0 (p = 0.004) | ||||||
| DASH/QuickDASH scores—literature | ||||||||
| Study | Mean follow-up | Final percent disability mean (SD) | Mean improvement from first form | |||||
| Novak et al. (n = 57) | 38.0 months | 52.0 (±22.0) | N/A | |||||
| Lequint et al. (n = 30) | 6.0 months | 38.0 (±21.5) | 10.0 (pre-op—current) | |||||
| Domeshek et al. (n = 19) | 4.0 months | 37.2 (±27.0) | 11.3 (pre-op—current) | |||||
| Ido et al. (n = 52) | 34.8 months | 6 months | 13.6 (pre-op—current) | |||||
| 12 months | 16.2 (pre-op—current) | |||||||
| 16.1 (pre-op—current) | ||||||||
| Guse and Moran (n = 54) | 240 months | 19.75 (±20.5) | N/A | |||||
Statistical comparisons of final SF-36 and DASH scores in our cohort versus those reported in the literature.
| SF-36 scores—cohort versus Novak et al. > 6 months post-injury without operative intervention (n = 57) | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cohort at 9 months (n = 8) | ||||||||
| Physical function | Role limit to physical health | Role limit to emotional problems | Energy/fatigue | Emotional well-being | Social function | Pain | General health | |
| Effect size (d) | 0.02 | 0.67 | 0.50 | 0.10 | 0.57 | 0.30 |
| 0.59 |
| Power (1−β) | 0.05 | 0.41 | 0.26 | 0.06 | 0.32 | 0.12 |
| 0.34 |
| p-value | 0.954 | 0.132 | 0.378 | 0.227 | 0.785 | 0.154 |
| 0.112 |
| Cohort at 6 months (n = 5) | ||||||||
| Effect size (d) | 0.16 | 0.41 | 0.51 | 0.23 | 0.45 | 0.44 |
| 0.87 |
| Power (1−β) | 0.06 | 0.14 | 0.19 | 0.08 | 0.16 | 0.15 |
| 0.45 |
| p-value | 0.759 | 0.371 | 0.333 | 0.659 | 0.248 | 0.395 |
| 0.096 |
| DASH / QuickDASH score comparisons | ||||||||
| Study used for comparison | ||||||||
| Cohort postop follow-up | Novak et al. (n = 57) | Lequint et al. (n = 30) | Domeshek et al. (n = 19) | Ido et al. (n = 52) | Guse and Moran (n = 54) | |||
| 3 Months | ||||||||
| Mean difference | 3.1 | −10.9 | −11.7 | −35.3 | −29.15 | |||
| p-value | 0.288 | 0.044 | 0.071 | > 0.999 | > 0.999 | |||
| 6 Months | ||||||||
| Mean difference |
| −1.0 | −1.8 | −25.4 | −19.25 | |||
| p-value |
| 0.442 | 0.415 | 0.995 | 0.991 | |||
| 9 Months | ||||||||
| Mean difference |
|
|
| −11.9 | −3.15 | |||
| p-value |
|
|
| 0.936 | 0.661 | |||
Negative mean difference values indicate that our cohort had worse scores than the comparison study. Significant improvements are in bold, improvements approaching significance (0.05–0.10) are italicized.
Six-month data from Ido et al. were used for t-tests at 3 and 6 months for our cohort; 12-month data from Ido et al. were used for t-tests at 9 months for our cohort.