| Literature DB >> 35887666 |
Martin Aman1, Bahram Biglari2, Mirjam Thielen1, Arne H Boecker1, Annette Stolle1, Daniel Schwarz3, Emre Gazyakan1, Ulrich Kneser1, Leila Harhaus1.
Abstract
Complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) can result in a devastating condition. For a small number of patients, there is a non-response to any existing multimodal therapies and they ultimately request amputation. Such a drastic and final decision is not easy to take for both the patient and the surgeon and requires careful and interdisciplinary assessments and considerations. Furthermore, new surgical procedures, such as targeted muscle reinnervation (TMR) and hybrid prosthetic fitting, and multidisciplinary board advice should be included when considering amputation. In order to help other therapeutic teams in decision making for such rare but more than demanding cases, we aimed to propose an advanced algorithm for amputation indications in CRPS patients combining all these new factors. This algorithm consists of extensive pre-operative psychiatric assessment, diagnostic hybrid prosthetic fitting including fMRI analyses, multidisciplinary board advice as well as targeted muscle reinnervation and amputation procedures with final prosthetic fitting and rehabilitation. By involving multiple disciplines, this algorithm should provide optimized and individualized patient treatment on the one hand and a reliable base for decision making for therapists on the other.Entities:
Keywords: CRPS; TMR; amputation; fMRI; nerve transfer; prosthesis; sudeck disease; targeted muscle reinnervation
Year: 2022 PMID: 35887666 PMCID: PMC9319192 DOI: 10.3390/jpm12071169
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pers Med ISSN: 2075-4426
Figure 1Algorithm for indicating amputation in CRPS patients.
TMR nerve transfer matrix according to different levels of amputation used in our facility. Note that individual planning is required according to definite level of amputation. The transfers were adapted from our experience from [4,27,28,29,30].
| Level of Amputation. | Nerve | Targeted Muscle Motor Branch |
|---|---|---|
|
| Musculocutaneous | Clavicular part—pectoralis major |
| Ulnar | Pectoralis minor | |
| Median | Sternocostal part—pectoralis major | |
| Radial | Abdominal part—pectoralis major | |
| Deep radial branch | Infraspinatus | |
|
| Musculocutaneous | long head biceps brachii |
| Ulnar | Short head biceps brachii | |
| Median | Brachialis | |
| Radial | Long head/medial head triceps brachii | |
| Deep branch of the radial nerve | Lateral head triceps brachii | |
| Deep branch of the radial nerve | Brachioradialis | |
|
| Median | Flexor digitorum superficialis |
| Ulnar | Flexor carpi ulnaris | |
| Superficial branch of the radial nerve | Anterior interosseus nerve | |
|
| Tibial | Semitendinosus |
| Peroneal | Biceps femoris | |
| Posterior cutaneous nerve | Biceps femoris | |
| Saphenous | Vastus medialis | |
|
| Posterior tibial nerve | Medial or lateral gastrocnemius |
| Deep peroneal nerve | Tibialis anterior, peroneal mm. | |
| Superficial peroneal nerve | Peroneal mm. | |
| Saphenous nerve | Medial gastrocnemius | |
| Sural nerve | Tibialis posterior |
Figure 2Example fMRI activation pattern upon a voluntary knee-bending task with the patient‘s right leg showing new co-activation of the right primary motor area. The green arrow indicates area of underrepresented activation while knee bending, whereas after hybrid fitting and training, new activation patterns could be observed.
Figure 3Algorithm demonstration on a 16-year-old female patient with CRPS of the left knee. She developed flexion contracture. After hybrid fitting of the prosthesis, she was able to experience walking with her prospective future prosthetic device.
Figure 4Amputation at above-knee level was performed in combination with TMR. Individual nerve transfers are displayed in main text and Table 1.