The Surgical Treatment of Total Brachial Plexus Avulsion Injury-A Retrospective Study of 73 Patients

NCT ID: NCT03162393

Last Updated: 2017-05-22

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Total Enrollment

73 participants

Study Classification

OBSERVATIONAL

Study Start Date

2016-01-01

Study Completion Date

2016-12-31

Brief Summary

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Brachial plexus avulsion injury (BPAI) caused by traction injury, especially total root avulsion, represents a severe handicap for the patient. Despite recent progress in diagnosis and microsurgical repair, the prognosis in such cases remains unfavorable. We need to find an relatively optimal surgical treatment.

Detailed Description

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Brachial plexus avulsion injury (BPAI) caused by traction injury, especially total root avulsion, represents a severe handicap for the patient. Despite recent progress in diagnosis and microsurgical repair, the prognosis in such cases remains unfavorable. Nerve transfer is the most successful method for repairing cases of brachial plexus root avulsion. Phrenic nerve transfer, accessory nerve transfer, intercostal nerve transfer and contralateral C7 transfer are all well-established technique in the treatment of certain severe brachial plexus lesions in adults. As reported in previous articles, shoulder function, elbow flexion, elbow extension, and wrist and finger function have been restored successfully by spinal accessory, phrenic, intercostal, and contralateral C7 nerve transfers . However, the results of just one function reconstruction were evaluated in those articles. Few studies were found that focused on the whole function reconstructions of the affected limb. In different medical organizations even in our department, many different surgical strategies were used in treating total BPAI patients and the results differed significantly. Here, we investigated the results of different commonly used nerve transfer in order to determine a relatively optimal surgical strategy for treatment of total BPAI patients.

Conditions

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Brachial Plexus Injury

Study Design

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Observational Model Type

CASE_ONLY

Study Time Perspective

RETROSPECTIVE

Study Groups

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group 1

phrenic nerve transfer to musculocutaneous nerve; spinal accessory transfer to suprascapular nerve; intercostal nerve transfer to triceps branch, radial nerve and axillary nerve; contralateral C7 nerve transfer to median nerve

nerve transfer

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

group 2

phrenic nerve transfer to musculocutaneous nerve; spinal accessory transfer to suprascapular nerve; intercostal nerve transfer to triceps branch and radial nerve; contralateral C7 nerve transfer to median nerve

nerve transfer

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

group 3

spinal accessory transfer to suprascapular nerve; intercostal nerve transfer to triceps branch, radial nerve and axillary nerve; contralateral C7 nerve transfer to median nerve and musculocutaneous nerve

nerve transfer

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

group 4

spinal accessory transfer to suprascapular nerve; intercostal nerve transfer to triceps branch and radial nerve; contralateral C7 nerve transfer to median nerve and musculocutaneous nerve

nerve transfer

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

group 5

spinal accessory transfer to suprascapular nerve; intercostal nerve transfer to musculocutaneous nerve, radial nerve and axillary nerve; contralateral C7 nerve transfer to median nerve and triceps branch

nerve transfer

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

group 6

spinal accessory transfer to suprascapular nerve; intercostal nerve transfer to musculocutaneous nerve and radial nerve; contralateral C7 nerve transfer to median nerve and triceps branch

nerve transfer

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

Interventions

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nerve transfer

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* global root avulsion brachial plexus injury, a minimum postoperative interval of 3 years, all operations performed by the same medical team, nerve transfer was the only reconstruction method.

Exclusion Criteria

* diabetes, Volkmann contracture, fracture on the affected limb, rib fracture, brain trauma.
Minimum Eligible Age

12 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

60 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Huashan Hospital

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Kaiming Gao

Doctor

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Other Identifiers

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NSFC-H0605/81501871

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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