The Role of Vascularized Nerve Grafting in Upper Extremity Reconstruction: A Systematic Review

Vascularized nerve grafts (VNGs) have been proposed as encouraging alternatives to conventional nerve grafting; however, there is ongoing debate regarding the clinical advantages of the approach compared with standard grafting. This review aims to gather and analyze reported cases of upper extremity...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of hand surgery global online 2024-09, Vol.6 (5), p.766-778
Hauptverfasser: Hosseini, Helia, Diatta, Fortunay, Parikh, Neil, Dony, Alna, Yu, Catherine T., Persad-Paisley, Elijah, Lu, Johnny Chuieng-Yi, Hill, Elspeth Jane Rose
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Vascularized nerve grafts (VNGs) have been proposed as encouraging alternatives to conventional nerve grafting; however, there is ongoing debate regarding the clinical advantages of the approach compared with standard grafting. This review aims to gather and analyze reported cases of upper extremity nerve repair using VNGs documented in the published literature. In accordance with Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines, PubMed/MEDLINE, Embase, and Cochrane were searched. Inclusion criteria for this review included the following: (1) human subjects or cadaveric studies, (2) describing a vascularized nerve grafting procedure or suggesting a nerve and vascular supply for a potential vascularized nerve graft, and (3) upper extremity nerve repair in clinical studies. Data were extracted from 45 clinical studies. Of 535 patients, the most common injury pattern was root avulsion and rupture (88.7%). The most utilized VNG was the ulnar nerve (72.8%), followed by nerve to long head of triceps (8.8%) and sural nerve (8.2%); most common recipients were median (57.6%), axillary (12.5%), and musculocutaneous nerves (11.9%). Between patients who had medical research council scale scores, 69% had functional (M3 and above) motor and 72.7% sensory (S3
ISSN:2589-5141
2589-5141
DOI:10.1016/j.jhsg.2024.01.028