Upper Limb

Indications for Surgery

 

Upper limb surgery is mainly in spastic hemiplegia

- many of the CP' s have sensory neglect for affected limbs   

- won't use limb post surgery anyway

 

Surgical indications

- a reasonable level of IQ (>70)

- spastic not athetoid 

- voluntary grasp and release

- intact sensation / stereogenesis

- good motivation

- hygiene

 

Options

 

1.  Tendon lengthening / division

2.  Tendon transfer

3.  Tenodesis / arthrodesis

 

Principles

 

1. Lengthening is more predictable than transfer

2. Tendon transfers alone can never overcome rigid osseous deformity

3. Joints which are not under voluntary control should be tenodesed or arthrodesed before tendon transfer

4. Agonist-antagonist tenodesis (spastic coupling) is a good approach because it is symmetrical & balanced

 

Typical Posture

 

Shoulder - adducted and internally rotated

Elbow - flexed + pronated

Wrist - flexed + pronated

Fingers - swan-neck +/- flexed

Thumb - in palm

 

Shoulder

 

Soft tissue

- lengthening / release of P major and subscapularis

 

Bony

- external rotation osteotomy humerus

 

Elbow

 

Indication

- contracture > 45o

 

Options

 

Mild

- lengthen biceps / lacertus fibrosis / brachialis

 

Severe 

- release CFO (Steindler) 

- distal release of brachioradialis and pronator teres + anterior capsulotomy

 

Pronation

- release of pronator teres +/- transfer to radius (makes it a supinator of the forearm)

- if severe osteotomy of radius putting it in neutral rotation

 

Wrist

 

Flexion deformity 

 

Class 1 (mild) 

- fingers can be extended with only 20o or less of wrist flexion 

- Release FCU or CFO slide (Steindler)

 

Class 2 (moderate)

- full flexion only possible with > 20o wrist flexion 

- A: extensor power present

- B: no extensor power

- CFO release

- transfer FCU to ECRB if no extensor power

- +/- FDS to ECRB transfer

 

Class 3 (severe) 

- great wrist & finger flexion deformity without extensor motors

- no functional gain is expected 

- surgery here is to improve cosmetic appearance only

- multiple releases +/- wrist arthrodesis

 

Fingers

 

Swan neck deformity

 

Aetiology

- over pull of extrinsic extensors / central slip shortening / intrinsic spasticity

- final common pathway is volar plate incompetence with hyperextension at the PIPJ

 

Management

- FDS tenodesis through a volar Brunner incision

 

Thumb

 

Most crippling upper extremity deformity

- can be a significant hygiene problem in severely affected 

- may need surgery despite not fitting criteria set out above

- in practice surgery is directed at what the pathology is 

 

Type 1 

- weak EPL

- reroute EPL + reinforce with PL or FCR or brachioradialis

 

Type 2 

- intrinsic contracture & first dorsal interosseous tightness

- release webspace +/- Z plasty

 

Type 3 

- weak APL & EPB

- APL tenodesis reinforced with PL, FCR or brachioradialis

 

Type 4 

- spasticity of  FPL

- Z lengthening of FPL