Publications by authors named "Mark J C Smeulders"

Extensor pollicis longus rerouting is a common procedure to improve thumb abduction in thumb-in-palm deformity seen with spastic cerebral palsy. In 1985, Manske redirected the extensor pollicis longus tendon in this procedure through the first extensor compartment. They also proposed an alternative subcutaneous route around the extensor pollicis brevis and abductor pollicis longus tendons proximal to the extensor compartment.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Wound drains are often used after plastic and reconstructive surgery of the breast, in order to reduce potential complications. It is unclear whether there is any evidence to support this practice and we therefore undertook a systematic review of the best evidence available.

Objectives: To compare the safety and efficacy of the use of wound drains following elective plastic and reconstructive surgery procedures of the breast.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Thumb-in-palm deformity disturbs a functional grip of the hand in patients with cerebral palsy. Reported recurrence rates after surgical correction are contradicting and earlier studies are limited to short-term follow-up. Therefore, the aim of this retrospective clinical outcome study is to evaluate the success rate of surgical correction of thumb-in-palm deformity around 1 year and at a minimum of 5 years follow-up.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Fireworks injuries are common and often affect children. Such injuries should be considered high energy trauma in the emergency room and taken care of according to the principles of the Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS).

Case Description: A 7-year-old boy was a victim of an explosion when he set off illegal fireworks.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Wound drains are often used after plastic and reconstructive surgery of the breast, in order to reduce potential complications. It is unclear whether there is any evidence to support this practice and we therefore undertook a systematic review of the best evidence available.

Objectives: To compare the safety and efficacy of the use of wound drains following elective plastic and reconstructive surgery procedures of the breast.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Haemangiomas are considered to be the most common tumours of infancy. However, despite their frequent occurrence the aetiological determinants of their development remain unknown. Identifying these factors may provide insight on their pathogenesis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Flexor carpi ulnaris muscle tenotomy and transfer to the extensor side of the wrist are common procedures used to improve wrist position and dexterity in patients with cerebral palsy. Our aim was to determine whether this muscle still influences wrist torque even after tenotomy of its distal tendon.

Methods: Intra-operatively, we determined in vivo maximal wrist torque in hemiplegic cerebral palsy patients (n=15, mean age 17 years) in three conditions: 1) with the arm and the muscle intact; 2) after tenotomy of the flexor carpi ulnaris just proximal to the pisiform bone, with complete release from its insertion; and 3) after careful dissection of the belly of the muscle from its fascial surroundings up until approximately halfway its length.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Agreement on terminology and nomenclature is fundamental and essential for effective exchange of information between clinicians and researchers. An adequate terminology to describe all patients showing vascular malformations combined with deregulated growth is at present not available.

Objectives: To propose a classification of patients with vascular malformations, not restricted to the face, and growth disturbances based on simple, clinically visible characteristics, on which clinicians and researchers can comment and which should eventually lead to an internationally accepted classification.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

When performing a tongue reduction a frequently asked question is how operation will influence taste of the patient. Different kinds of taste tests are designed, most of these being non-specific ways to determine taste sensation in which high concentration of taste solutions are used to detect if a person is able to taste. To be able to judge the influence of tongue reduction on taste we wanted to develop a validated test that could be used in early childhood.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: To examine the relationship between impaired manual dexterity and perceived competence in children with cerebral palsy and the effect of surgical intervention, with the question whether the perceived competence is applicable as an outcome measure for surgical reconstruction of hand function.

Method: The Dutch version of the Michigan Hand Outcomes Questionnaire (MHQ-DLV) for perceived manual dexterity and the Dutch version of the Harter Scales for perceived competence were used in a sample of 25 children and adolescents with hemiplegic cerebral palsy of the spastic type. 10 patients underwent surgical treatment to improve hand function.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

One hundred and seven bilateral breast reductions were prospectively randomised during surgery to receive or not receive wound drains. Fifty-five patients were randomised to have a drain and 52 to not have a drain. There was no statistical difference in the number of complications between the drained and undrained group (P=0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Active and passive length-force curves of spastic flexor carpi ulnaris (FCU) muscles were intra-operatively measured in 10 patients with cerebral palsy to study the variability in FCU muscle function. Maximum active FCU force was in general situated near the neutral position of the wrist and varied between 40 and 135 N. Passive forces varied between 1 and 8 N at maximum active force.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The current rationale of clinical practice in spastic tendon transfer surgery is based on four assumptions: (1) changes in muscle fiber length (serial number of sarcomeres) determine the available length range and joint excursion, (2) muscle cross-sectional area determines the maximal force output, (3) fiber length and muscle force are invariable functions of muscle length, (4) there is an invariable relation between the elastic force and the active force exerted by the sarcomeres. The validity of these assumptions is discussed. Additionally, some new perspectives in muscle research are discussed and myofascial force transmission is introduced as a co-determinant for the outcome of tendon transfer by presenting some exploratory observations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Combined skin-sparing mastectomy and immediate reconstruction by use of an implant is increasingly accepted as a therapy for patients with breast cancer or a hereditary risk of breast cancer. Because little and contradictory evidence regarding possible risk factors for postoperative complications is available, the authors retrospectively assessed 13 such factors. They also evaluated the oncological safety of the procedure.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

To show that human muscle may adapt to tendon transfer, adaptation of flexor carpi ulnaris (FCU) function was studied by measuring active and passive length-force characteristics at initial operation and at reoperation in a case of extension deformity secondary to FCU tendon transfer. At reoperation, FCU was 20 mm shorter; active force decreased approximately 10%, indicating atrophy; and passive force increased, reflecting increased stiffness. FCU fiber length was unchanged.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Although scar evaluation tools are necessary for an evidence-based approach to scar management, there is as yet no generally accepted tool. The Patient and Observer Scar Assessment Scale was developed recently and found to be a useful subjective evaluation tool for burn scars. The authors tested the Patient and Observer Scar Assessment Scale on linear scars, the largest category of surgical scars.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Recent animal experiments have shown that up to 37% of muscle force may be transmitted to adjacent structures rather than reach the insertion of the muscle's tendon, and that the extent of such force transmission depends on the length and relative position of these structures. We tested whether the force-length characteristics of the distally tenotomized human flexor carpi ulnaris muscle (FCU) of nine patients with cerebral palsy varied with the change of relative length of adjacent structures induced by a change of wrist position. In four patients, the FCU exerted up to 40% more active force in a flexed wrist position at short FCU length, whereas the active force was not significantly higher in the other five.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The forearm part of the extended lateral arm flap may be separately raised on the most distal septocutaneous perforator of the posterior collateral radial artery. This truly distal lateral arm flap shares most of the advantages of the radial forearm flap and is associated with less donor site morbidity. From April 2000 to March 2004, we used 30 such flaps as the fasciocutaneous free flap of choice, mostly for reconstructions in the head and neck region.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

To answer the question whether the muscle contracture in patients with cerebral palsy is caused by overstretching of in-series sarcomeres we studied the active and passive force-length relationship of the flexor carpi ulnaris muscle (FCU) in relation to its operating length range in 14 such patients with a flexion deformity of the wrist. Force-length relationship was measured intra-operatively using electrical stimulation, a force transducer, and a data-acquisition system. Muscle length was measured in maximally flexed and maximally extended position of the wrist.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The specific relationship between force and length is one of the most important characteristics of vertebrate muscle. The only accurate method to measure the force-length characteristics is to generate a set of isometric force-time plots at different muscle lengths. In humans, such force-length characteristics mostly are based on indirect measurements that have their limitations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In 1986, the combined use of the lateral thoracodorsal flap and an implant was introduced as an alternative method of delayed reconstruction of small to medium-size breasts for postmastectomy patients who are reluctant or unable to consider reconstruction by tissue expansion or by more extensive autologous tissue transplantation. So far, the technique has only been proven reproducible in Sweden. Postmastectomy radiotherapy has been proven to increase the risk of wound-healing complications after lateral thoracodorsal transplantation, and additional risk factors such as advanced age, obesity, smoking, and some general health characteristics have been indicated.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Extramuscular connective tissue and muscular fascia have been suggested to form a myo-fascial pathway for transmission of forces over a joint that is additional to the generally accepted myo-tendinous pathway. The consequences of myo-fascial force transmission for the outcome of conventional muscle tendon transfer surgery has not been studied as yet. To test the hypothesis that surgical dissection of a muscle will affect its length-force characteristics, a study was undertaken in adult male Wistar rats.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: Assessment of the quality of fine motor control in patients with unilateral chronic wrist pain seldom focuses on the possibility that control of movements is effector independent at the cerebral level. This mechanism may be involved in an impairment of motor function in the unaffected wrist. We studied the possible motor impairment in the unaffected wrist in patients with chronic wrist pain.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF