Medical Breakthough: Breakthrough surgery restores hand function to paralyzed patient

GREETINGS,

Breakthrough surgery restores hand function to paralyzed patient

SOURCE: www.rawstory.com

A surgeon operates on a broken hand in 2009. For the first time, US surgeons have used a new type of operation called nerve transfer to restore hand function in a patient who was paralyzed by a neck injury. (AFP Photo/Axel Schmidt)

For the first time, US surgeons have used a new type of operation called nerve transfer to restore hand function in a patient who was paralyzed by a neck injury, said a study published Tuesday.

The breakthrough surgery worked by taking a non-functional nerve that controls pinching the forefinger and thumb and plugging it into a functioning nerve in the man’s upper arm which had been used for bending his elbow.

After many months of intensive physical therapy, the 71-year-old patient — who was paralyzed from the waist down and lost the use of his hands in a car accident — can now feed himself and even write with some assistance, according to the study in the Journal of Neurosurgery.

“This is not a particularly expensive or overly complex surgery,” said senior author Susan Mackinnon, who developed and performed the surgery.

“It’s not a hand or a face transplant, for example. It’s something we would like other surgeons around the country to do,” said Mackinnon, chief of the Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery at Washington University School of Medicine.

The patient’s injury was in the lowest bone in his neck, known as the C7 vertebra.

Patients with injured C7 and C6 vertebra have no hand function and are considered quadriplegic, though they can often move their shoulders, elbows and wrists because those nerves attach to the spinal cord above the injury site.

For people who are injured higher up along the neck, from the C5 to C1 vertebra, such an operation would not likely be successful in restoring hand and arm function, doctors said.

“This procedure is unusual for treating quadriplegia because we do not attempt to go back into the spinal cord where the injury is,” said surgeon Ida Fox, assistant professor of plastic and reconstructive surgery at Washington University……..more here

Click here for reuse options!
Copyright 2012 Hiram's 1555 Blog

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.