AI Article Synopsis

  • Femoral nerve injuries can disrupt knee function due to loss of the quadriceps muscle's locking mechanism, prompting a need for new treatment options.* -
  • A new procedure was proposed to connect the motor branches of the obturator nerve to the femoral nerve, tested on five cadavers.* -
  • Findings showed a 26 mm overlap and compatible diameters between the two nerves, allowing for easy and tension-free direct sutures, suggesting potential clinical benefits for treating femoral nerve injuries.*

Article Abstract

Femoral nerve lesions are uncommon, but very distressing at the functional level because of the absence of knee locking mechanism by the quadriceps muscle. We propose here a new neurotization procedure of obturator nerve motor branches to the motor portion of the femoral nerve in the thigh. This study was conducted on five cadavers. The motor portion of the femoral nerve and the motor branches of the obturator nerve, supplying the gracilis and adductor longus muscles, were isolated. The distance between nerve endings and diameter were measured to determine if a direct neurorrhaphy was possible between the femoral nerve and the two united branches of the obturator nerve. The overlap between the two nerve endings was 26 mm on average, and the mean diameter of the two nerve endings was 3.6 mm for the united branches of the obturator nerve and 3.7 mm for the femoral nerve. Thus, a direct suture was possible in all cases. In this anatomical study, access to the femoral nerve and two united branches of the obturator nerve was easy, in contrast to transfer in the pelvis. Moreover, direct suture without tension was possible in all cases. Thus, this transfer is simple and perfectly reproducible and may have a clinical application in proximal femoral nerve injuries.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/micr.22012DOI Listing

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