MRI Diffusion Tensor Tractography to Monitor Peripheral Nerve Recovery After Severe Crush or Cut/Repair Nerve Injury
NCT ID: NCT02960516
Last Updated: 2023-03-10
Study Results
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View full resultsBasic Information
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COMPLETED
19 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2016-10-31
2021-07-29
Brief Summary
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The investigators aim is to longitudinally assess diffusion tensor tractography (DTI) in order to optimize, validate, and translate the ability of DTI to monitor and, more importantly, predict nerve regrowth following trauma and surgical repair. The overall objective of this study is to evaluate the ability of (DTI) to monitor and, more importantly, predict nerve regrowth following crush or cut with surgical repair. The investigators hypothesize that the additional information available via DTI will improve our ability to monitor and predict nerve regrowth following surgical repair or severe crush injury, guiding clinical management either toward or away from surgical intervention.
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Detailed Description
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In terms of the military, extremity injuries accounted for 54% of combat wounds in Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom and recent review of service member injuries during Operation Enduring Freedom noted significant increases in brachial plexus, ulnar, and radial nerve injuries attributable to modern warfare. In addition, symptomatic neuroma occurs in 13% to 32% of amputees, causing pain and limiting or preventing the use of prosthetic devices. Take the example of a wounded warrior with a shrapnel injury to his/her elbow, resulting in the loss of an ulnar nerve segment. Even if nerve grafting is performed, true recovery (motor and/or sensory innervation of the hand) could take up to a year under typical circumstances. If the repair fails, which occurs in up to 40% of patients the failure is typically not truly recognized until that year expires using current management protocols. By that time, revisional surgery is typically not a viable option due to the aforementioned onset of irreversible muscle atrophy. In additional to an inability to effectively monitor nerve recovery after repair, diagnosis of peripheral nerve injuries is difficult using the currently available methods. For example, neurotmesis is a common, but difficult to distinguish, diagnosis following traumatic or iatrogenic extremity injury. Current electrodiagnostic and clinical examinations are invasive, time consuming, and painful. In addition, they cannot perfectly discriminate a severe axonotmetic laceration from a self-resolving neurapraxic injury in the acute setting. This is particularly important in penetrating injuries, or after iatrogenic nerve injuries resulting from nerve blocks, or from intraoperative positioning or external compression, because the degree of axonal injury is unknown.
Conditions
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Study Design
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COHORT
PROSPECTIVE
Interventions
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MRI of 3.0T
Diffusion Tensor Testing for peripheral nerve monitoring
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Candidates for immediate operative repair of this injury and do not have significant medical comorbidities precluding immediate operative intervention
* willing to comply with all aspects of the treatment (post-operative visits, occupational therapy) and evaluation schedule over the following 12 months
* have peripheral nerve injuries complicated by significant vascular or orthopedic damage
Exclusion Criteria
* soft tissue coverage is inadequate
* planned staged repair
* have diabetes
* have a neuromuscular disease
* undergoing chemotherapy, radiation therapy or other treatments known to affect the growth of the neural and vascular system
* unlikely to complete occupational therapy
* pregnant or breast-feeding
* subject with any ferromagnetic objects that cannot be removed (cardiac pacemakers, aneurysm clips etc).
* history of claustrophobia
18 Years
64 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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United States Department of Defense
FED
Vanderbilt University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Wesley Thayer
Wesley Thayer, MD, Phd
Principal Investigators
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Wesley Thayer, MD, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Locations
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Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Nashville, Tennessee, United States
Countries
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References
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Noble J, Munro CA, Prasad VS, Midha R. Analysis of upper and lower extremity peripheral nerve injuries in a population of patients with multiple injuries. J Trauma. 1998 Jul;45(1):116-22. doi: 10.1097/00005373-199807000-00025.
Provided Documents
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Document Type: Study Protocol and Statistical Analysis Plan
Document Type: Informed Consent Form
Other Identifiers
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160761
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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