Login / Signup

Wrist extensor pathomechanics: implications for tendon and nerve transfer.

Jan FridénRichard L Lieber
Published in: The Journal of hand surgery, European volume (2024)
Central and peripheral nervous system lesions may disrupt the intricate balance of the prime movers of the wrist. In spasticity, hyperactive wrist flexors create a flexion moment and, if untreated, can lead to flexion contractures. In patients with C6 spinal cord injury and tetraplegia, the posterior interosseus nerve is typically affected by a complex pattern of upper and/or lower motoneuron lesions causing radial deviation of the wrist due to loss of ulnar deviation actuators. In this report, we illustrate severe pathomechanics that may occur even with relatively modest changes in wrist balance. These results illustrate how thorough understanding of muscle-tendon-joint interaction aids in designing tendon and nerve reconstructive surgeries to normalize wrist positions and balance in neuromuscular conditions.
Keyphrases
  • spinal cord injury
  • anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction
  • peripheral nerve
  • rotator cuff
  • skeletal muscle
  • spinal cord
  • early onset
  • antiretroviral therapy
  • chemotherapy induced