Showing posts with label hand. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hand. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Reconstruction of the Burned Hand – an article review

Updated 3/2017-- all links removed (except to my own posts) removed as many no longer active. 

Going through a stack of journals that have piled up, I noticed a nice little article (full reference below) discussing reconstruction of the burned hand.  It’s a short, seven page article full of information.
Early treatment and aggressive management are critical to restoring optimal hand function following burn injury. It has been shown that an early, multidisciplinary approach to the care of the burned hand has led to a successful outcome in 97 percent of patients with superficial injuries and 81 percent of patients with deep dermal burns.
Early treatment is important for the best outcomes with burned hands.  If there is any question of degree or severity, refer hand burns to a burn center or specialist.
The article notes the various burned hand deformities can be classified into the following categories:
(1) hypertrophic burn scars and burn scar contractures
(2) claw deformity
(3) web space deformity
(4) the severely burned hand which may involve
many deformities simultaneously
The article discusses each of these malformations individually along with their management and reconstructive options.  This article is worth your time to read and reread.




REFERENCE
Reconstruction of the Burned Hand; Kreymerman, Peter A.; Andres, Lewis A.; Lucas, Heather D.; Silverman, Anna L.; Smith, Anthony A.; Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery. 127(2):752-759, February 2011; doi: 10.1097/PRS.0b013e3181fed7c1

Monday, August 8, 2011

Review of NSAIDs Effects & Side Effects for Arthritis Pain

Updated 3/2017-- all links (except to my own posts) removed as many no longer active. 

Recently I gave in and went to see a rheumatologist after more than 3 months of intense morning stiffness and swelling of my hands (especially around the PIPs and MCPs) and wrists which improved during the day but never went away.  It had gotten to the point where I could no longer open small lid jars (decreased strength), do my push-ups or pull ups (pain and limited wrist motion), and OTC products (Tylenol, Advil, etc) weren’t working.  I can’t take Aleve due to the severe esophagitis it induces.  I didn’t want to write a prescription for my self-diagnosed (without) lab arthritis.
BTW, all the lab work came back negative with the exception of a slightly elevated sed rate and very weakly positive ANA.  The rheumatologist was impressed with the swelling, pain, and stiffness and was as surprised as I by the normal lab work.  He thinks (and I agree) that I am in the early presentation of rheumatoid arthritis.  He wrote a prescription for Celebrex and told me to continue with the Zantac I was already taking (thanks to the Aleve).  The Celebrex is helping.
So I was happy to see this article (full reference below) come across by twitter feed.  H/T to @marcuspainmd: Useful review of NSAIDs effects & side effects for arthritis pain http://cot.ag/oHxQDX
A major disadvantage of NSAID use is the gastrointestinal side effects. These range from abdominal pain, nausea, diarrhea, and dyspepsia to more serious events, such as gastric or duodenal ulcers, anemia, and bleeding, or perforated ulcer. These side effects are due to the simultaneous inhibition of COX-1 and COX-2.
As many as 25% of chronic NSAID users will develop ulcer disease
2%–4% will bleed or perforate, especially those who have been designated as being in a high-risk category
The overall risk for these complications in patients taking NSAIDs was approximately 2.4.
High-risk patients are those with a history of complicated peptic ulcer disease or multiple (at least two) risk factors; moderate-risk patents are those with one to two risk factors, ie, age 65 years, high-dose NSAID therapy, previous history of an uncomplicated ulcer, concurrent use of aspirin (including low-dose), corticosteroids, or anticoagulants; and low-risk patients are those with no risk factors.
The two methods employed to prevent the development of peptic ulceration and mucosal injury in patients taking NSAIDs:
(1) prophylaxis with a proton pump inhibitor or a prostaglandin analog (such as misoprostol) or high-dose histamine 2-receptor antagonist (H2RA)
(2) with substitution of a traditional NSAID by a COX-2 inhibitor
The article on ulcer formation in COX-2 (Celebrex) vs NSAIDS:
Goldstein et al14 determined gastroduodenal damage
from endoscopy after 4, 8, and 12 weeks of treatment with celecoxib 200 mg twice daily or naproxen 500 mg twice daily in 537 patients with osteoarthritis or rheumatoid arthritis.
The cumulative incidence of gastric and duodenal ulceration for celecoxib was 9% and for naproxen was 41%. In the group that received celecoxib, the occurrence of ulcers was significantly associated with a number of factors, including H. pylori positivity, concurrent aspirin usage, and a history of ulcers.

It’s a really nice review article and is open source.



REFERENCES
Combination therapy versus celecoxib, a single selective COX-2 agent, to reduce gastrointestinal toxicity in arthritic patients: patient and cost-effectiveness considerations;  Marina Scolnik, Gurkirpal Singh; Open Access Rheumatology: Research and Reviews 2011:3 53–62

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Shout Outs

Updated 3/2017-- photos and all links (except to my own posts) removed as many no longer active. 

Medgadget is the host for this week’s issue of Grand Rounds! You can read this week’s edition here.
Welcome to Grand Rounds, the weekly recap of the best in the medical blog universe! And welcome to Medgadget, where our team of researchers, doctors and engineers cover the world of medical devices and health-related technology news.
For Grand Rounds this week, we suggested bloggers send us technology-related material, and they rose to the challenge; we received some amazing links. Of course, there was great non-techie material too. It’s all below, loosely categorized, with photos and quotes lifted from posts of note.   …….
……………………………
Amazing story from BBC science reporter Neil Bowdler: Bionic hand for 'elective amputation' patient (photo credit)
An Austrian resident has voluntarily had his hand amputated so he can be fitted with a bionic limb.
The patient, called "Milo", aged 26, lost the use of his right hand in a motorcycle accident a decade ago.
….. what is called a "brachial plexus" injury to his right shoulder left his right arm paralysed. Nerve tissue transplanted from his leg by Professor Aszmann restored movement to his arm but not to his hand. ….
………………………………..
angienadia, MD, Primary Dx, has written a thoughtful post on resident work hours which can be read both on her blog or on KevinMD: New ACGME work hour regulations for interns: friend or foe?
…..Libby highlighted what was and is wrong with medicine today. Private physicians cannot and should not be allowed to manage patients who are sick enough to be admitted by phone – ………
The solution stares us in the eye – interns need a stricter cap on the number of patients they can admit or care for at one time. …... Sixteen-hour shift is not the answer – it only aggravates the actual source of the problem
……………………………….
Sandnsurf, LITFL, give praise to an inspiration patient: Nathan Charles
Patients are often a source of inspiration and hope.
One such stand out individual is Nathan Charles.
I first met Nathan in January of this year in my role as team doctor for the Emirates Western Force rugby union team. Nathan is a 21 year old elite athlete playing number 2 (hooker) for the Western Force. But what makes this achievement even more admirable is that he has cystic fibrosis. …………
…………………………………….
NPR’s Robert Krulwich writes about women in science: The Ghost Of Madame Curie Protests...
……….. I got to thinking about the not-so-subtle way women have been treated in science, even the most celebrated ones.
A few months back, I wrote a post about how the Nobel Committee (a committee of guys) in 1911 tried to get Madame Curie NOT to come and collect her second Nobel Prize. ……….
…………………………….
From @enochchoi via twitter:   my #TedXHayward talk on Disaster Medical Relief http://ow.ly/4ZTt2
Disaster Medical Relief on Prezi
…………………….
Fellow medical blogger @DrJohnM wrote about some things he observed on his recent trip to Germany:   A Kentucky Doc goes to Europe
……..For now, may I highlight a few of the more striking differences between Europe and the States, as noted by a Kentuckian on his first trip across the Atlantic?
(I realize that sophisticated well-traveled people already know this stuff, but I can’t help myself.)
First...The transportation system in Europe uses much smaller vehicles……….
Second…The bikes! I was stunned by the sheer numbers of smart-looking people pedaling around on the sidewalks and streets of Hamburg……….
On healthcare:
(A disclaimer: I am only making observations and asking questions; I am not suggesting we adopt the German healthcare system after a five-day visit.)
I quickly learned that all German citizens get free healthcare. But those who desire ‘more’ care can buy additional private coverage.  ……….
……………………………………………..
You can find some of my iPhone photos here. They are not nearly as good as the ones in this HuffPost Arts article from John Seed: The Art of iPhone Photography in Orange County (PHOTOS)
If Cartier-Bresson was still taking photos today, he would ditch his Leica and be taking photos with an iPhone. At least, that is the view of Knox Bronson, a curator, composer and iPhoneographer who has been gathering a stunning gallery of iPhone photos on his site: P1XELS the art of the iPhone.
Bronson, who is a purist, is only interested in collecting photos that have not in any way been manipulated outside of the phone by a computer:
This is one of mine (Instagram photo app with Inkwell filter of a pink rose in full bloom):

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Florida Student Gets Hand Transplant

 Updated 3/2017-- photos and all links (except to my own posts) removed as many are no longer active and it was easier than checking each one.

This is a difficult post for me to write.  As much as I admire the surgeons who are pushing this new advance I found myself bothered by this one.  Why?     That’s what I have been asking myself.  After all, Linda Lu, 21 year old, is a college student from Orlando, Florida is ecstatic about the new hand.
"I've already accepted it as my hand since the day I woke up," Linda Lu said during a Monday press conference at Emory University Hospital in Atlanta, where the surgery took place. "But just looking at it, sometimes I still can't believe that it's there... It kind of feels like magic."
"I'm in information technology," Lu said. "So, my primary goal is to be able to type."
Simple enough goal, isn’t it?   When playing the “what would I give up game” my hands are never given up easily.  I could probably learn to sew with only one hand, but it would be difficult and it would become mostly machine sewing.  I could still blog as I could type with one hand – not as fast, but it would get done. 
I would not be able to do surgery with one hand, but a hand transplant would not give that back to me anyway.  The dexterity would never be good enough.
Linda is reported to have lost her left hand when she was 1 year old.  The amputation was done due to complications from Kawasaki disease.
Still I’m left with this uneasy feeling.  Most people born with only one hand/arm adjust well.  For example, look at the baseball pitcher Jim Abbott. 
This healthy young woman will now be placed on anti-rejection medications for life.  It will make any pregnancies she has high-risk ones.  She will be more susceptible to infections.  Some anti-rejection medications increase the risk of cancers.
Just because we can do a procedure doesn’t mean we always should.  I hope my uneasiness regarding this one is misplaced.  After all, I am getting my information from news articles and not from a discussion with the patient.

Newsprint articles
Florida Student Receives Rare Hand Transplant Surgery, FoxNews.com, March 28, 2011
Valencia student has rare hand transplant at Emory University, LA Times, March 28, 2011 (video as well as print)

Related posts:
Double Hand Transplant on Twitter  (August 26, 2010)
Cost of Hand Transplantation?  (September 22, 2010)
Rejection  (December 1, 2010)
New Technology May Help Prevent Rejection in Hand Transplant Patients (December 13, 2010)

Friday, February 18, 2011

1790 Eagle Quilt Finished!

Updated 3/2017-- all links removed as many are no longer active and it was easier than checking each one.

Last month I showed this quilt as a WIP (work in progress).  It is now finished after 3 weeks of hand quilting, every night for 2-3 hours.  I am pleased with how it turned out.  Forgive my photos as I am not great at taking photos of whole cloth quilts.  The quilt is white white not a cream white.
The quilt is 20 in square and hand quilted.  The front and back look like mirror images of each other.  Here is the front:
Here is the back:
Here is a photo of the eagle detail (from the back).
Here is a photo of one of the corners.

This quilt will be part of the Eagle Motif Wallhanging Decade by Decade Project and represents the decade 1790-1800.

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Heart in Hand Quilt – WIP

Updated 3/2017-- all links removed as many are no longer active and it was easier than checking each one.

This quilt won’t be done in time for Valentine’s Day as I just started it yesterday. It is inspired by this scarf featured on Street Anatomy. I cropped a screen shot, brushed in the heart (suggested by the arterial formation), and then printed it out on a sheet of Colorfast fabric.
There is a long tradition of heart in hand quilt blocks. When searching for the meaning of the symbolism I found several – charity, friendship, compassion.
These photos were taken after I finished the piecing and basting of the quilt. I now have to do the quilting. It will be approx 18 in X 23 in when finished.
Here is a close up of the center which is approx 5 in X 11 in.

Monday, December 13, 2010

New Technology May Help Prevent Rejection in Hand Transplant Patients

Updated 3/2017-- all links (except to my own posts) removed as many are no longer active and it was easier than checking each one.

Previously I posted on rejection in hand transplant patients when it was reported double hand transplant on patient Rich Edwards of Oklahoma might “lose the fingertips on his right thumb and pinkie because his body started to reject the new limbs.”
Jewish Hospital Hand Care Center and the Christine M Kleinert Institute have released news on a new medical device which may allow detection of rejection at an earlier stage.  Early detection could then improve treatment and perhaps prevent limb loss as with the team’s 4th patient Dave Armstrong who had his transplanted hand amputated in April 2009 due to rejection.
I first read about this new device, an ultrasound biomicroscopy device, in Wave3.com’s December 6, 2010 article: New technology helping keep transplanted hands attached.  Today I found the December 9, 2010 press release from the team (bold highlight is mine).
Despite recent setbacks, Dr. Richard “Rich” Edwards, the nation’s third double hand transplant recipient, continues to progress under the care of Kleinert Kutz and Associates hand surgeons at Jewish Hospital in Louisville, Ky.
Dr. Edwards experienced complications in mid-November when signs of rejection caused him to be hospitalized for several days.  Michael Marvin, M.D., chief of transplantation, Jewish Hospital/University of Louisville, and Rosemary Ouseph, MD, director of kidney transplantation at University of Louisville, who have overseen Edwards’ post-surgical immunosuppressant drug regimen, added steroid shots to Dr. Edwards’ routine to counteract the rejection.
The complication, which resulted in a loss of blood flow has caused the tip of Dr. Edwards  right pinkie to turn black. He had already had the tip of the thumb turn black due to a loss of blood flow shortly after the transplant. Unfortunately, those fingertips may eventually need to be removed.
Dr. Warren Breidenbach, partner at Kleinert Kutz  and Associates and assistant clinical professor of surgery at the University of Louisville said, “ The left hand is doing great and has good function. I call the right hand the “miracle hand” because of blood flow issues early on. The good news about the right hand is it has re-established blood flow and his hand function has almost caught up with the left hand.  The bad news is the right hand does not have the same volume of blood flow as the left, but it does have enough to survive.  The right hand remains a problem hand with an unknown future.  We are in uncharted waters with the right hand.”
Breidenbach added, “All hand transplant patients have the risk of loosing a hand at any time. In addition, all patients go through a rejection episode in the first six months. Dr. Edwards was around three months out from the transplant.  He had swelling which compromised the blood flow in mid November.“
Dr. Edwards remains closely monitored by the team at the Christine M. Kleinert Institute for Hand and Microsurgery (CMKI), including Christina Kaufman, PhD., executive director of CMKI and assistant professor at the University of Louisville.  Dr. Kaufman uses ultrasound biomicroscopy (UBM), a new technology that utilizes very high frequency ultrasound (20-70 MHz) to noninvasively monitor blood flow, vessels, arteries and artery intima, or thickness, which is where signs of potential rejection often first appear.
The device, which has not yet been approved for clinical use, was purchased with funds from the Department of Defense in January 2010.  Each of the previous hand transplant patients are also being monitored using UBM. Currently, Dr. Edwards is being tested every two weeks.
“Using this new technology we have done a great deal of investigation,” said Kaufman.  “There is a push to reduce the immunosuppressant medications, but we do not want to risk the loss of the hand.  With this machine, we are hoping to be able to reduce the drug regimen with maximum safety.  We are making advances and we’re getting better. That’s what research is about.”
Dr. Edwards continues therapy on his hands five-days-a-week with the therapists at the Christine M. Kleinert for four-hours-a-day. His wife, Cindy Edwards, assists him with additional therapy on his own several times each day, seven-days-a-week. His hands have already helped him regain independence in his daily activities.  He can brush his teeth, comb his hair, take his shirt on and off and feed himself throughout an entire meal – all activities that he was unable to do unaided before the transplant.  He hopes to be able to return to his home in Edmond, Oklahoma for the holidays.
“Every one to two days, I can see a change in my hands,” said Dr. Edwards.  “They are the best Christmas gift that I have ever been given.”
“These are minute changes, but when you work with his hands all day every day, those changes are encouraging,” said Cindy Edwards.  “He’s come a long way in less than four months.”
Dr. Edwards worked as a chiropractor before losing both hands when his truck caught fire on February 11, 2006.  Unable to escape the burning vehicle, he was severely burned on his face, back, arms and hands, leaving very little tissue in both hands.
Dr. Breidenbach led the team of surgeons from Kleinert Kutz, Christine M. Kleinert Institute and the University of Louisville who performed the initial 17 ½ hour surgical procedure August 24-25, 2010, at the Jewish Hospital Hand Care Center.  He continues to manage Dr. Edwards’ follow-up care.
The Composite Tissue Allotransplantation program is a partnership of physicians, researchers and healthcare providers at the Jewish Hospital Hand Care Center, Kleinert Kutz and Associates, the Christine M. Kleinert Institute and the University of Louisville. The group developed the pioneering hand transplant procedure and has performed five other hand transplants since 1999.  Kentucky Organ Donor Affiliates coordinated the hand donation for the team’s hand transplant procedures.
The hand transplant is sponsored by the Department of Defense, Office of Naval Research and Office of Army Research to further research in the composite tissue allotransplantation program.
Patient and physician information, photography and video are available at www.handtransplant.com and http://www.jhsmh.org/hand. 

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Repost: Focal Dystonia of the Hand

Updated 3/2017-- photos and all links (except to my own posts) removed as many are no longer active and it was easier than checking each one.

Earlier this week I caught bits and pieced of Diane Rehms interview of pianist Leon Fleisher. She was interviewing him about his many musical careers and his memoir: My Nine Lives: A Memoir of Many Careers in Music.
So I thought I would repost my blog post from October 2007 on Focal Dystonia of the Hand.
……
Earlier this week I read an article in Reader's Digest (November 2007 Issue) on Leon Fleisher and his focal dystonia of his right hand. The article is written by Oliver Sacks, MD and is a exert from his book "Musicophilia: Tales of Music and the Brain". I wanted to review what I knew about focal dystonia and ended up learning much. I would like to try to share this with you. Enjoy this "Ravel Piano Concerto for the Left Hand 1/2" played by Leon Fleisher.


The term dystonia collectively refers to a heterogeneous group of movement disorders characterized by sustained involuntary muscle contractions that result from co-contracting antagonistic muscles and overflow into extraneous muscles. Focal dystonias are adult-onset forms that affect a specific area of the body, ie hand, neck, vocal cords. Most focal dystonias are primary. By primary it is meant that the dystonia is the only neurological symptom.
Focal hand and limb dystonia usually begins as a painless loss of muscular control in highly practiced movements. A genetic predisposition is thought to occur in less than 5% of all cases of focal dystonia. There are many professions that require repeated and intricate hand movements. However, focal hand dystonia is more common in musicians than any other group of professionals, including dentists, surgeons, and writers. This disorder is often referred to in medical literature as occupational cramps (ie, “violinist’s cramp”, “pianist’s cramp”, "writer's cramp"). (photo credit)
Cause
There is no one isolated cause of hand and limb dystonia. A variety of pathological conditions may lead to similar symptoms. As a child develops, he/she learns many different movements (such as walking, writing, or playing an instrument) that are stored in the brain as motor programs. Instances of hand dystonia that are highly task-specific have been described as a “computer virus” or “hard drive crash” in the sensory motor programs that are essential for playing music. However, additional factors, such as a genetic predisposition, are likely to play a significant role in the development of such a sensory-motor dysfunction. Why this “computer virus” cannot be easily overcome by establishing a new and improved sensory-movement pattern remains an important question for researchers.
Symptoms
Most affected persons describe symptoms in terms of their occupation terms. A musician may notice
  • Subtle loss of control in fast passages
  • Lack of precision
  • Curling of fingers
  • Fingers “sticking” to keys
  • Involuntary flexion of bowing thumb in strings
A writer may notice:
  • Deterioration in neatness or speed of writing or just clumsiness
  • A cramp or aching in the hand on writing
  • May report that the hand freezes up on attempting to write
  • Difficulty in moving the pen across the page
A tremor may or may not be associated with the spasms. In most cases, the dystonia is present only in the context of specific tasks (and may be very specific to one instrument--a clarinet but not a saxophone). The dystonia may appear extremely sensitive to sensory input: a pianist may experience symptoms while playing on ivory keys but not while playing on plastic keys. Sometimes the modification of posture and even facial expressions may affect dystonic spasms in the hand.
Physical Exam
Inspection
No special examinations are described for focal dystonia other than inspect the patient performing his task.
  • The pen commonly is held very tightly, with an exaggeration of the normal semiflexed posture of thumb, index and other fingers, and with hyperextension of the distal interphalangeal joint of the index finger. Occasionally, the hand suddenly stops and the paper is perforated, or it might dart across the page with a sudden jerk. The script produced is usually abnormal. Tremor is a common finding in all forms of writer’s cramp but it is usually not severe. (photo credit)
  • Examination of the musician while playing reveals non-physiologic posture and gestures in most of the patients. Sometimes it is possible to identify involuntary dysfunction such as flexion, curling in one or two fingers, or involuntary extension of the “sticking fingers”. These may be difficult to detect, even with slow motion video.
The remainder of physical examination is often normal, but subtle findings can be noted in some patients: dystonic postures of the affected limb when the patients sit or walk, or loss of arm swing of the affected side during the gait.
Palpation
There is minimal unilateral increase in muscle tone in some patients. There are no other abnormal findings.
Quantification
The Fahn-Marsden scale was designed to quantify generalized or focal dystonia and can be found here.
Electromyography
Electromyography studies show prolonged duration of muscle bursts with superimposed shorter, repeated bursts of activity. The pattern is of complete lack of selectivity for individual muscles with overflow of contraction to muscles not normally activated by the task being performed. Electromyography may also useful as a guide to botulinum toxin injections.
X-rays
Radiographs are not useful in the assessment of focal dystonia. Occasionally, in an appropriate setting, magnetic resonance image of the brain can be useful to rule out a cerebrovascular disease.
Treatment
There is no cure for dystonia at this time, and although treatment of the disorder may be challenging, there are several available options. The different causes of hand dystonia may warrant different treatments. Don't give up--see Leon Fleisher's story.
Oral medications: There are a number of therapeutic agents with clear beneficial effects to writer’s cramp, including anticholinergics, clonazepam and benzodiazepines. High dosage of anticholinergic drugs is firstly recommended for the treatment of dystonia.
  • Doses recommended of biperiden are 2 mg per oral two or three times a day and titration to 16 mg a day.
  • Diazepam is another choice. However, it is rarely adequate when used as sole agent. Doses are 10mg per oral two or three times a day.
  • Clonazepam can be useful for improvement of phasic symptoms in cases with myoclonus and/or tremor. Doses are 0.25 mg per oral twice a day, increasing to 0.125 to 0.25 mg every three days up to a dose of 4 mg/day.
Botulinum toxin injections has been used for the treatment of writer’s cramp with good results. Its application requires careful and precise technique. The selection of the muscle should be based on careful physical examination while the patient writes or plays in order to trigger the dystonic movements. The injection should be carried out under EMG guidance with a hollow recording needle and the botulinum toxin is injected through the same needle. Small volume injections into multiple sites are preferred to a single large injection. Dose per muscle varies from 2.5-25 units. Initially, only few muscles are injected. The dose per muscle and number of muscles injected are optimized (based on response) for subsequent injections.
Splints
Some patients find that finger-splinting device made individually according to their symptoms help improve their ability to write or to play a musical instrument. Limb immobilization for four weeks and a half is a simple and sometimes effective treatment for this condition. (photo credit)
"Therapeutic approaches involving the practice of movements are likely to remain unsuccessful unless their design includes a framework that, in principle, aims at interrupting this vicious circle. Indeed, a recently developed behavioural therapy, termed sensory motor retuning, holds great promise (Candia et al., 2002Go). Musicians with focal hand dystonia performed repetitive movements with fingers of their dystonic hand while one or more fingers except the dystonic ones were immobilized. After therapy, movements of the dystonic fingers were substantially better controlled, with some musicians reaching near-normal performance levels. Along with improvement of motor behaviour, the topography of the somatosensory representation of the fingers became normalized." from Brain article (see references below).
For an interesting list of people who have struggled with this problem, check here.
References and Resources
Mark Hallett, MD
NIH clinical study "A Training Protocol for the use of Botulinum Toxin in the Treatment of Neurological Disorders", reference No. 85-N-0195
Focal Dystonia of the Hand by Marcos Sanmartin
Focal hand dystonia – a disorder of neuroplasticity?; Brain, Vol. 126, No. 12, 2571-2572, December 2003; Joseph Classen
Upper Limb Disorders in Musicians by Raoul Tubiana, MD
Tubiana R. Musician’s focal dystonia. Hand Clin 19: 303-308, 2003.
Dystonia Fact Sheet--National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
Dystonia--pianomap
Focal Dystonia from a Guitarist's Perspective by Jarrod Smerk
A Tale of Two Hands--Charlie Rose talks to pianist Leon Fleisher
Muscians with Dystonia Foundation

Monday, December 6, 2010

Dorsal Hand Coverage Refinements

Updated 3/2017-- all links (except to my own posts) removed as many are no longer active and it was easier than checking each one.

Injuries to the dorsal hand, wrist, and distal forearm are relatively common. Degloving and crush injuries can result in exposed tendons and bone. These are not simple wounds which can be repaired by primary closure but often require early debridement of devitalized tissue and soft-tissue coverage involving local or regional flaps (reverse radial/ulnar forearm or posterior interosseus flaps), distant pedicle flaps, or free flaps.
The skin of dorsal hand and wrist is very thin, mobile, and supple and very visible in day to day activities. We present our hand in greeting for a hand shake. Our hands are visible when keyboarding or talking on the phone. We hold hands with our loved ones. We want our hands to both work/function and be aesthetically pleasing.
Function must come first with a severe injury, but the authors of the first article referenced below correctly note “with high success rates, flap survival should no longer be the sole criterion in judging success in dorsal hand and wrist reconstruction.”
In an attempt to determine the best flap for dorsal hand coverage in terms of aesthetic appearance, donor-site morbidity, and minimization of revision surgery, the authors conducted a retrospective review of all free flaps for dorsal hand and wrist coverage from 2002 to 2008 was performed. Flaps were divided into four groups: muscle, fasciocutaneous, fascial, and venous flaps. Outcomes assessed included need for debulking, blinded grading of aesthetic outcomes, and flap and donor-site complications.
The problem with this article and it’s outcomes is the fact that it is a retrospective review. This “confounding factor” is expounded upon in the discussion article (second reference below).
Keeping that in mind, here are a few “findings”
Fasciocutaneous flaps scored the lowest in all aesthetic categories. The bulkiness of these flaps can make contouring difficult and often require future debulking. Color match is also an aesthetic issue.
Fasciocutaneous flap donor-sites often require skin grafting. When primary closure is done, the authors found a higher rate of breakdown than with the other flaps.
Due to these disadvantages, fasciocutaneous flaps have become our secondary choice for dorsal hand reconstruction.
There are two advantages of fasciocutaneous flaps. First, flap re-elevation is easier than with muscle flaps.
Second, flap tissue can be rearranged and divided with less concern for blood supply as would be needed in a muscle flap; a few months after flap transfer, fasciocutaneous flaps appear to be less reliant on the primary pedicle. In addition, if patients will require secondary reconstructions, then debulking can be done at this time.
The authors found muscle flaps covered with split-thickness skin grafts had significantly better overall aesthetic, contour, and color match results than fasciocutaneous flaps. They also required less debulking most likely due to atrophy of the muscle.
We have been increasingly using partial muscle flaps for dorsal hand and wrist coverage in which the flap size harvested is tailored to the defect size. These are harvested as a partial superior latissimus muscle or as a partial medial rectus muscle flap, leaving the majority of the donor muscle and its motor nerve intact. These are small, custom-designed flaps.
………Despite the teaching that fascia is needed for tendon glide, we have noted no difference in tendon functional results when covered with muscle versus fascia. This conceptually makes sense, as normally tendons and muscle bellies constantly glide past each other in the forearm.
Fascial flaps with split-thickness skin graft are thin and pliable. These scored high in all aesthetic categories and rarely needed debulking. Donor-site morbidity is minimal, as no muscle is harvested and the donor site is closed primarily without need for grafting.
For these reasons, fascial flaps are a first-line treatment for moderate-sized to large dorsal hand wounds, allowing a single-staged procedure with minimal need for revision surgery. Their aesthetic appearance is better than that of fasciocutaneous flaps, and they require less debulking than muscle flaps.
Final aesthetic results are dependent on skin graft take and any graft failure results in poorer texture and color match results. Nonmeshed grafts have better aesthetic results than meshed grafts for the dorsal hand.
Venous flaps required no debulking in this study and had the best overall aesthetic results with excellent color, contour, and texture match. These flaps are often harvested from the volar forearm in the suprafascial plane, allowing them to be very thin and pliable, matching the surrounding dorsal hand skin. They are limited to use for small to moderate-sized defects.
REFERENCE
Refining Outcomes in Dorsal Hand Coverage: Consideration of Aesthetics and Donor-Site Morbidity; Parrett, Brian M.; Bou-Merhi, Joseph S.; Buntic, R. F.; Safa, B.; Buncke, G. M.; Brooks, D.; Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery. 126(5):1630-1638, November 2010; doi: 10.1097/PRS.0b013e3181ef8ea3
Discussion: Refining Outcomes in Dorsal Hand Coverage: Consideration of Aesthetics and Donor-Site Morbidity; Fang, F.; Song, J. W.; Chung, K. C.; Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery. 126(5):1639-1641, Nov 2010; doi: 10.1097/PRS.0b013e3181f1cf42

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Rejection

Updated 3/2017-- photos and all links (except to my own posts) removed as many are no longer active and it was easier than checking each one.

Doctor Richard Edwards, a chiropractor from Oklahoma and the nation's third double hand transplant, was recently in the news again.  This time it a report that he “may lose the fingertips on his right thumb and pinkie because his body started to reject the new limbs.”
Dr. Edwards’ surgery was live tweeted when it was done in August by Louisville surgeons at The Jewish Hospital Hand Care Center.
Jeff Kepner, the first patient in the United States to receive two hands simultaneously, experienced an episode of rejection which was dealt with successfully.
Rejection is never a good thing in a transplant patient not matter which organ or part transplant.  Even though I applaud the advances being made, we must always consider the cost of the proposed treatment and ask if there a better option for this individual?
Hand or arm transplantation is not possible for all.  A missing arm can bring (social) rejection to the individual as it did for this woman, Tammy Chinander (photo credit, shown with her daughter Krystal).  [H/T from @vpmedical]
The Rudd native lost her arm at the age of 2 when she caught it in a wringer washing machine. The arm was amputated above the elbow.
For years, she managed with an arm with a hook, but at the age of 31, she decided she was through with it.
"I got tired of it hanging there," she said. "It wasn't working. It looked bad. My son was scared of it."
 
The best choice for her turned out to be a German-manufactured Otto Bock DynamicArm, typically $75,000 to $100,000 in cost which will be paid by her insurance.
Chinander's goal is to get the new arm to work as well as her other arm. Right now, it takes serious concentration to use it.
"I'm going through the second part of my life learning to do everything two-handed," she joked.
…..Krystal could not hold back the tears as she described what it is like for them.
"Getting that first two-armed hug from your mom that you see all the other kids getting is really wonderful," she said.
 
 
REFERENCES
Hand Transplant Fact Sheet: History and Evolution of Hand Transplantation;  UPMC/University of Pittsburgh Schools of the Health Sciences 
Transplantation — A Medical Miracle of the 20th Century; Peter J. Morris, F.R.S.; N Engl J Med 2004; 351:2678-2680December 23, 2004
Immunosuppression and Rejection in Human Hand Transplantation; Schneeberger S, Gorantla VS, Hautz T, Pulikkottil B, Margreiter R, Lee WP;  Transplant Proc. 2009 Mar;41(2):472-5.

Thursday, September 30, 2010

Postoperative Management of CMC Joint Fracture Dislocation of the Hand

Updated 3/2017-- all links (except to my own posts) removed as many are no longer active and it was easier than checking each one.

I haven’t seen or treated any wrist dislocation injuries since my hand surgery fellowship, but still read an article regarding their treatment every now and then. I stumbled across this one (full reference below) via MDLinx. The full article is available for free online.
The authors of the article note in their literature search that most multiple carpometacarpal (wrist) fracture/dislocation injuries are due to motor vehicle accidents. They were unable to find any large studies of multiple CMC dislocations. One of the “largest” had only 10 patients.
Multiple CMC dislocations are uncommon and occur from high-energy trauma. Treatment of these injuries require operative fixation. The reduced fractures/dislocations are stabilized using K-wires which remain in place for 6-8 weeks.
Prolonged immobilization can result in stiffness of hand joints, tendon adhesions, and muscle weakness. The authors of the CJPS article note that early controlled motion must be balanced with sufficient immobilization of the fractures/dislocations to allow healing.
The main purpose of their case presentation is to describe a novel postoperative rehabilitation regimen in their multiple CMC fracture dislocation patient (a 28 yo male).
The wrist and hand were immobilized in the neutral position for two weeks in a short arm splint and for an additional four weeks in a short arm circumferential cast.
The Kirscher wires were removed at the outpatient clinic at eight weeks. Radiographs confirmed union…
Hand therapy, consisting of protective splinting and active-assisted ROM, was initiated eight week following injury. ….
Hand therapy was then progressed to the use of a novel circumferential carpal stabilization brace that the patient wore at all times. The carpal brace extended from the metacarpal heads to the radiocarpal joint. This permitted movement of the radiocarpal and metacarpal joints, while firmly supporting the CMC articulations. Following removal of the cast, the brace was worn at all times. ……
REFERENCE
Postoperative management of carpometacarpal joint fracture dislocation of the hand: A case report; T Bell, SJ Chinchalkar, K Faber; Canadian Journal of Plastic Surgery, Autumn 2010, Volume 18 Issue 3: e 37-e 40
Carpometacarpal Fracture Dislocation; Wheeless’ Textbook of Orthopaedics (accessed Sept 16, 2010)
Hand, Metacarpal Fractures and Dislocations; eMedicine Article, August 20, 2009; James Neal Long, MD, James A Chambers, MD, MPH, Jorge I de la Torre, MD, FACS,

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Cost of Hand Transplantation?

 Updated 3/2017-- all links (except to my own posts) removed as many are no longer active and it was easier than checking each one.

The recent double hand transplant and catching up on my journal reading has prompted me to look into the cost of hand transplantation. My personal identity seems to me to be tied up in my hands. I am a surgeon. I cook for my husband. I am a quilter.
I have at times tried to imagine loosing a finger or a hand. It difficult to the point of almost being unimaginable for me. Which hand would I give up? Which digit?
I am so right handed, I find it difficult to brush my teeth using my left hand. Yes, I could learn in time. Same with using a pen. Even my limited use of my left arm when I had olecranon bursitis brings my dependency on my hands/arms into sharp focus. It was humbling.
The PRS article (first reference) in assigning utility surveyed participants asking them “to imagine as vividly as possible that they had experienced an amputation of the dominant hand or bilateral hand amputations.”
For example, our survey asks the respondent to choose between living for 40 years with a prosthetic hand and living for x years with a healthy hand. The value of x is varied until the respondent feels that the choices are equivalent. If the respondent judges that living for 40 years with a prosthetic hand is equivalent to living for 20 years with a healthy hand, the utility of living with a prosthetic hand is calculated as 20/40, or 0.50.
I have yet to decide what my answer would be. The article survey of 100 second-year, third-year, and fourth-year University of Michigan Medical School students determined utility as follows:
Transplantation with minor complications (unilateral = 0.78; bilateral = 0.73)
Transplantation with major complications (unilateral = 0.59; bilateral = 0.53)
Prosthetic device use (unilateral 0.75; bilateral 0.63)
Emotionally most would agree that hand transplantation is a worthy goal. Physically, it is possible. The outcome is not always as good as envisioned. Never is the transplanted hand as functional as a non-injured hand. Never.
The function of a transplanted hand has been found to be similar to a replanted hand.
to put it in the words of one physician from the Louisville team that performed the first U.S. hand transplant, the patient will likely “have difficulty with buttons, perhaps not be able to pick up a dime.”
Gerald Fisher, the second of the Louisville recipients, returned to work hanging gutters just two months after his operation
According to the Lyon team, the world’s first double-hand transplant recipient is able to shave and take care of other personal hygiene tasks that he was unable to do before his transplant
With much physical/occupation therapy afterwards, the transplanted hand can be functional. It’s not likely I would be able to pick up a needle to sew/hand quilt again, but I would be able to brush my hair and teeth.
The ethics of a non-life threatening diagnosis (loss of one or both hands) being treated with a procedure that requires immunosuppressive drugs for life is still being debated and should be. From the PRS article (first reference)
The toxicity of immunosuppressive medication, however, brings about an ethical dilemma. In solid organ transplantation, 40 percent of posttransplant deaths were attributed to infection; transplant recipients have a seven-fold 5-year risk over the general population of developing malignancies.
This all brings us back to the actual costs of hand transplantation which is very difficult to determine though Dr. Oda and colleagues have done a good job in attempting to do so. I think they may have underestimated the costs.
Lifetime costs for single hand transplantation average $528,293, whereas costs for double hand transplantation average $529,315.
Total costs of prosthesis adoption for unilateral and bilateral amputation are $20,653 and $41,305, respectively.
The mean surgical cost, including preoperative evaluation, hospitalization, and physician fee, are $13,796 for single hand transplantation and $14,608 for double hand transplantation.
The cost of immunosuppressive therapy for 40 years, including drugs and clinic visit, is $433,283 ($362,894-503,672).
The cost of productivity loss for hand transplantation and prosthetic adaptation are $42,265 and $9753, respectively.
Oda and colleagues doubled the traditionally cost-effectiveness threshold of $50,000/QALY (employed based on the acceptance of kidney transplantation) to $100,000 for their analysis.
For unilateral hand amputation, prosthetic use was favored over hand transplantation (30.00 QALYs versus 28.81 QALYs; p = 0.03).
Double hand transplantation was favored over the use of prostheses (26.73 QALYs versus 25.20 QALYs; p = 0.01). The incremental cost-utility ratio of double transplantation when compared with prostheses was $381,961/QALY, exceeding the accepted cost-effectiveness threshold of $100,000/QALY.
As pointed out by Dr. Concannon in the discussion of Oda’s article, I and others can muse all we want but it will most likely ultimately be out of our hands.
Ultimately, while the costs and worthiness of this technique may be debated in scientific journals, it will certainly not be decided in them. There are industry and governmental agencies with far sharper pencils than we have that will look very closely at the cost-benefit ratio before deciding whether this will be an acceptably “covered” procedure for their respective constituents. Perhaps the biggest hurdle in the implementation of limb transplantation will involve mastery not of the immune system but of actuarial tables.
REFERENCES
An Economic Analysis of Hand Transplantation in the United States; Chung, Kevin C.; Oda, Takashi; Saddawi-Konefka, Daniel; Shauver, Melissa J.; Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery. 125(2):589-598, February 2010.; doi: 10.1097/PRS.0b013e3181c82eb6
Discussion: An Economic Analysis of Hand Transplantation in the United States; Concannon, Matthew J.; Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery. 125(2):599-600, February 2010.; doi: 10.1097/PRS.0b013e3181c831e5
Hand transplantation not cost-effective; AAOS Now, January 2010 Issue; Peter Pollack
Hand Transplantation; Brown University Biomed Course Info (2001); accessed September 15, 2010

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Hands -- Guidance and Germs

Updated 3/2017-- all links (except to my own posts) removed as many are no longer active and it was easier than checking each one.

Some interesting items this week involving hands.  The one which has gotten much news coverage is the issue of hand washing.  Take a look at some of the headlines:
High five! Hand washing on rise (Chicago Sun-Times)
For Many, 'Washroom' Seems to Be Just a Name (New York Times)
93% of women wash their hands vs. 77% of men (USA Today)
All the above are reporting on the same study, but the difference in presentation is amazing to me.

The above study doesn’t involve hand washing in a hospital or doctor’s office setting.  The JAMA article (2nd reference below) does, but this article focuses on whether public reporting of hand washing compliance is helpful or not.  Do we inflate our numbers to make ourselves look better?
Public reporting creates an incentive to maximize performance but does not specify the manner in which this is achieved. Broadly speaking, 2 approaches are possible. Hospitals can adopt evidence-based strategies designed to improve patient outcomes that will also improve the publicly reportable indicator, or they can adopt indicator-based strategies designed to improve the reported indicator that may not improve outcomes and may even cause harm. Evidence-based improvement strategies would be favored in an environment in which organizations focus on improving patient outcomes—when such strategies exist and are easy to implement. Conversely, indicator-based improvement strategies would be favored in an environment in which the hospital focuses on protecting its reputation, when evidence-based improvement strategies are unproven or resource intensive, or when measurement of the indicator is easily manipulated to show improvement. …

I wish copyright laws would allow me to reproduce the entire essay from a recent issue of JAMA (first reference below).  The essay is written by Ariela Zenilman about her father’s hands. 
Between the scrapes from paper cuts, the finger on which a ring is worn, and the color of nail polish, the hands of the human body tell a story. They are the most mysterious reflection of character. The hands ….. Surgeons are blessed with steady hands for a reason: they reduce the trembling in the hands of worried family members, counteract pain and destruction, and alter creation for the better by fixing fault and disease within the body. A surgeon has the remarkable gift of a set of multifunctional and dexterous hands.
I have always admired my father's hands. From a very early age I could tell his grace and dedication to detail were apparent in how he moved and touched, felt and experienced the world around him. …... His hands seemed inexplicably and effortlessly linked to his every thought: as a young child I always dreamed of having hands like his.…….
When I see my father's hands ……. His hands are a mere reflection of his heart, an attribute I hope to see in my hands as I follow in his footsteps.
…. Hands reflect ability, accomplishment, and passion. …………., I have learned to trust my instincts, follow my heart, and, most of all, not to underestimate the power of my own hands.

I love hands.  I have been in love with the anatomy and mechanics of hands since medical school.  Before then I just loved to watch them work (my mother making biscuits, my teacher’s writing, basketball players shooting baskets, pianists, etc). 
For the general public, wash your hands – flu season is upon us.
For us involved in patient care, wash your hands before and after each patient.  This is one (if not the best) of the best lines of defense in preventing the spread of infection.



REFERENCE
The Hands That Guide Me; Ariela Zenilman; JAMA. 2010;304(10):1049. doi:10.1001/jama.2010.1291
Public Reporting of Hospital Hand Hygiene Compliance—Helpful or Harmful?; Matthew P. Muller; Allan S. Detsky; JAMA. 2010;304(10):1116-1117.
Finger and Wrist Exercises (April 19, 2010)

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Treatment of Common Congenital Hand Conditions – an Article Review

 Updated 3/2017-- photos and all links (except to my own posts) removed as many are no longer active and it was easier than checking each one.

This is a very nice article of five common congenital hand conditions.    The online journal includes three informative videos of surgeries with tips.
Syndactyly
Syndactyly is a common congenital hand anomaly, occurring in approximately one in every 2000 to 3000 live births.  Syndactyly can be inherited in an autosomal dominant manner, with variable expression or reduced penetrance.  It may also occur sporadically.
Syndactyly is classified as
  • complete when the fingers are fused all the way to the tip, including the nail folds
  • incomplete when the nail folds are not involved
  • simple when the fingers are fused by a skin bridge
  • complex when the bones are fused together
Syndactyly between the middle and ring fingers is most common, occurring in 57% of the cases, followed by the ring and little fingers, which occurs in 27% of the cases.

Constriction Ring Syndrome
Constriction ring syndrome is a rare condition with a reported incidence ranging from one in 1200 to one in 15,000 births.   The index, middle, and ring fingers are frequently affected, whereas the thumb is occasionally involved.  Deformities usually occur in multiple extremities and are most predominant in the distal parts.
Constriction ring syndrome is a condition in which the limbs or digits of the fetus become entangled with strands of the embryonic membrane.   This entanglement can create problems which include amputation, acrosyndactyly, and lymphedema.
The part of the finger distal to the constriction ring is often hypoplastic or absent, whereas the proximal part is intact.
  • Mild constriction ring is often asymptomatic.
  • Moderate constriction ring causes lymphedema distal to the ring.
  • Severe constriction ring blocks circulation of the arterial and venous system and causes nerve palsy resulting from nerve compression.
Duplicated Thumb
The incidence of duplicated thumb (preaxial polydactyly) is approximately one in 3000 live births.  It is most commonly found in Asians (2.2 in 1000).   The incidence in other groups:   Native Americans (0.25 in 1000), African Americans (0.08 in 1000), and Caucasians (0.08 in 1000). 
The majority of duplicated thumb cases are sporadic and unilateral, and do not require genetic consultation.  It is possible that triphalangeal thumb is associated with an autosomal dominant inheritance pattern.
Wassel Classification--Types I to VII based on level of duplications:
I : bifid distal phalanx (DP)(bone under the finger nail)
II: duplicated DP
III: bifid proximal phalanx (PP) (digit bone nearest the palm)
IV: most common type with duplication of proximal phalanx which rest on broad metacarpal
V: bifid metacarpal (MC) (bone in palm)
VI: duplicated MC
VII: triphalangism

Hypoplastic Thumb
Hypoplastic thumb can be present in isolation or in combination with any radial deficiency.  After duplicated thumb, hypoplastic thumb is the second most frequently encountered thumb anomaly.   Bilateral thumb involvement occurs in approximately 60% of children with thumb hypoplasia.
The Blauth-Buck-Gramcko classification is widely used to describe the hypoplastic thumb and is based on web space narrowing, hypoplasia of musculoskeletal components, joint instability, and abnormalities of extrinsic tendons.
Hypoplastic thumbs are associated with systemic syndromes such as Holt-Oram syndrome; the vertebral, anal, tracheal, esophageal, phalangeal, and renal (VATER) anomalies; or Fanconi anemia in 18 to 43 percent of the patients.  The entire affected upper extremity should be examined to determine the extent of the deficiency over the radial side of the limb.

Trigger Thumb
Trigger thumb in children is characterized by flexion at the interphalangeal joint and rarely presents with snapping as in adults. In most cases, a nodule or thickening of the A1 pulley is palpable.
Controversy remains as to whether the trigger thumb found in children is a congenital disorder or acquired after birth.
A prospective investigation of 1166 neonates showed no trigger thumb at birth, but two cases were observed at a 1-year follow-up.  Several other studies have also supported the opinion that childhood trigger thumb is an acquired rather than congenital condition.  However, cases of trigger thumb associated with trisomy 13 (Patau syndrome), fraternal twins, and families with generational occurrence indicate that there may be a heritable component in certain patient populations.

This article and the companion videos are worth your time.


REFERENCES
Treatment of Common Congenital Hand Conditions; Oda, Takashi; Pushman, Allison G.; Chung, Kevin C.; Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery. 126(3):121e-133e, September 2010.
Treatment of Common Congenital Hand Conditions - Video 1 - Syndactyly release with proximal-based dorsal rectangular flap
Treatment of Common Congenital Hand Conditions Video 2 - Ablation of the radial thumb and ligament reconstruction
Treatment of Common Congenital Hand Conditions - Video 3 - Pollicization of the index finger

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Double Hand Transplant on Twitter

Updated 3/2017 -- photos and all links (except to my own posts) removed as many no longer active.
 
Louisville surgeons at The Jewish Hospital Hand Care Center recently performed the 3rd double hand transplant done in the United States.  It is the first to be live tweeted.
The procedure began around 7 p.m. on Tuesday, August 24, and finished late Wednesday afternoon, August 25.  Lead surgeon, Warren C. Breidenbach, M.D, with Kleinert Kutz & Associates, and his team of surgeons focused on the surgery while senior hand fellow Christiana Savvidou, M.D. used a laptop just outside the operating room to document the surgery as it takes place.
This bilateral transplant is the third double hand transplant to be done in the United States.  The first two double hand transplants were done at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, the first in May 2009 and the second in February 2010.  Louisville doctors performed the nation's first five single hand transplants.
Savvidou used the tweeter account @jewishhospital (www.twitter.com/jewishhospital) and the hashtag #handtx.
Here are some of the tweets which are a good representation of how the surgery progresses and how much time it takes.
jewishhospital

1st tweet ~ 7 pm ET, shortly before start of surgery
Want to know how a hand transplant is done? This is your chance- we are live tweeting a double hand transplant 2day starting @ 7pm! #handtx
approx 2 hrs later
The recipient’s right hand is fully prepped and awaiting the transplantation of the donor limb. #handtx
Education of terms: “prepped” = hand is being scraped & sterile dressing. “Started” = skin has been cut and surgery begun. #handtx
approx 4 hrs after start
Continuing donor and recipient dissection tendon identification and nerve identification in both recipient hands. Going smoothly. #handtx
approx 5 hrs after start
Removal of non-functioning hand tissue in preparation for donor limb attachment. #handtx
Both donor hands are on the table. Preparing for bone work - bone fixation at forearm of right recipient wrist. #handtx
@stacyluvsyah The bones are reattached with plates and screws similar to how a broken bone may be repaired. #handtx
approx 6 hrs after start
Bone fixation completed successfully in both hands. #handtx
Surgeons are now preparing the arteries. This will be the most important part of the operation. #handtx
approx 7 hrs after start
The connecting of the donor and recipient vessels (arteries and veins) is progressing very well in both hands. #handtx
approx 8 hrs after start
The hand replantation is progressing well. Surgeons are joining the tendons. #handtx
approx 10 hrs after start
Both hands are now vascularized and we are approximately 3/4 of the way complete. All is progressing well. #handtx
approx 11 hrs after start
Tendon suturing nearing completion. Nerve repair to follow. This includes suturing nerves of each finger from donor to recipient. #handtx
approx 12 hrs after start

Due to the number of nerves and tendons, this current stage could take a while…update coming when we near completion of this stage #handtx
approx 13 hrs after start
Nerve repairs on the left hand are now complete. #handtx
approx 14 hrs after start
The left hand is currently approximately 2/3 closed and final work on veins is occurring. #handtx
approx 16 hrs after start

Finishing right hand nerve repair. Due to new technique, this patient should have better feeling & motion than previous recipients #handtx
The left hand is currently being sewn shut. #handtx
approx 17 hrs after start
The left hand is now fully wrapped in surgical gauze and cotton padding. #handtx
approx 18 hrs after start
Surgeons are starting to close up the right hand #handtx
approx 19 hrs after start
Extra tissue is needed to finish closing the right hand. A skin graft is being taken from the patient's leg for this. #handtx
almost 20 hrs after start

Skin graft on right hand finished and hand is completely closed. Starting cleansing and bandaging. #handtx
(photo credit)
 

While we embrace the new ways to educate the public, Dr. Wes reminds us of  The Risks of Hospitals Live-Tweeting Surgeries.
For more information on hand transplant surgeon visit the teams’ website: www.handtransplant.com. 

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Shout Outs

Updated 3/2017 -- photos and all links (except to my own posts) removed as many no longer active.


Mike, LITFL is the host for this week’s “killer” Grand Rounds.  You can read this week’s edition here.
It is with great honor that the Life in the Fast Lane team and the Utopian College of Emergency for Medicine host this weeks Grand Rounds Vol. 6 No. 45 on August 3rd 2010.
The theme for this edition is ‘Killer Posts‘. We asked the MedBlogosphere to trawl their blog archive and dive deep into the soul of their writing to find their best; most inspirational; clever; witty; well-researched; head-turning; gut-wrenching; magnificent; glorious requiem of a post…and they did! Furthermore, each author has chosen their preferred deadly Aussie critter, and we have coupled each blogger accordingly…
……………………………………….
In case you haven’t heard about the amazing rescue of @leighfazzina with help from her twitter friends last Tuesday, then you need to read her story in her own words:  Twitter Leads Rescue Efforts Fazzina Bike Crash
Twitter. Never underestimate its viral engaging power. Ever. Please, just don’t ever do it.
The power Twitter holds for instant viral communication is utterly amazing, and it helped me get rescued last night after I suffered a mountain bike crash in deep evening-lit woods that I was unfamiliar with.
Yes – that’s right. Thanks to the power of Twitter, I was rescued last night by the The Town of Farmington Fire Department (Connecticut) after suffering a serious mountain bike crash where I ended up off the beaten path alone in a wooded forest that was totally foreign to me. ……………
Listen to Dr. Anonymous’ interview of @DrJonathan who was involved in the rescue as one of Leigh’s twitter followers:  Doctor Anonymous: Dr. A Show 175: Twitter Saves Life.
………………………………..
New York Times Health segment Patient Voices featured patients with scleroderma this past week:  Patient Voices: Scleroderma
A disease that causes widespread hardening of connective tissue, scleroderma can affect people in a host of different ways. From a stiffening of the skin to digestive and breathing difficulties, scleroderma’s impact can be varied and far-reaching. Here, six men and women speak about how scleroderma has affected them. (Join the discussion on the Well blog.)
One of the six is Erion Moore diagnosed after he noticed increasing problems playing basketball.  (photo credit)
 
……………………………….
Dr Charles is hosting the first annual 2010 Charles Prize for Poetry.  Have you submitted one yet?
Open to everyone (patients, doctors, nurses, students, etc.). Limit 1 or 2 entries per person.
Poems should be related to experiencing, practicing, or reflecting upon a medical, scientific, or health-related matter……
Contest closes August 31st.
……………………………..
Medical Quack has written  UCLA Hand Transplant Program Announced – Research Study Program And Afflicted Patients Can Apply
Hand transplantation is still experimental. The UCLA Hand Transplantation Program is a research study that has been approved by UCLA's Institutional Review Board. …..
Eligibility Criteria for the UCLA Hand Transplantation Program
18-to-60 years of age
Good general health
Amputation not due to birth defect or cancer
Amputation of limb at the wrist or forearm
No serious infections such as hepatitis B or C or HIV
Patients who meet the basic eligibility requirements and wish to be considered for the UCLA Hand Transplantation Program should contact Dr. Kodi Azari, the Surgical Director of the Hand Transplantation Program at (310) 825-1745, for an initial evaluation.
…………………………………….
Yesterday, there was a very nice episode of the Diane Rehm show on Raising Awareness About Bladder Cancer
Bladder cancer is the fifth most commonly diagnosed cancer in the U.S. and one of the most expensive to treat. Each year, more than 60,000 new cases are discovered and 14,000 Americans die from the disease. Guest host Susan Page and guests look at efforts to spread the word about bladder cancer.
Guests
Sandra Steingraber:  biologist, author and bladder cancer survivor. She wrote "Living Downstream: An Ecologist's Personal Investigation of Cancer and the Environment."
Dr. Mark Schoenberg:  director of urologic oncology, The James Buchanan Brady Urological Institute at The Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions.
Diane Zipursky Quale:  president and co-founder, Bladder Cancer Advocacy Network.
…………………………………….
One of our fellow physician bloggers is in Uganda on a medical mission trip.  She has met a young man with elephantitis who needs help:
I met a 25 year old man named Jaffeer today. His right leg is diseased with elephantitis. ……. he is in constant pain 24/7.
He needs hospitalization in Kampala. He needs amputation. He needs a prosthetic leg.
This all requires money.
If you have always wanted to help, but didn't know how, now is the chance. …….
………………………………….

Dr Anonymous’ BTR show will be Pre-Med Student Erin Breedlove.  

Upcoming shows (9pm ET)
8/12: Pre-Med Student @InsaneMo
8/19: 4th Year Med Student @DrJonathan
8/26: Dr. A Show 3rd Anniversary

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Shout Outs

Updated 3/2017 -- photos and all links (except to my own posts) removed as many no longer active. 

Dr. John Schumannis, Glass Hospital, the host for this week’s Grand Rounds.   You can read this week’s edition here.
Hope you had a wonderful holiday weekend.
GlassHospital is proud to host this week’s Grand Rounds, a compendium of medical-related writing and blogging from around the world. This week’s theme, in honor of the holiday, is CELEBRATION. Here at GH we’re pleased to be celebrating the six month anniversary of our debut.
We have 21 pieces to share with you, including one poem and one photo. This week’s submissions, all celebratory-themed, seemed to cluster into five main categories: Aging gracefully, history & literature, medical drama, health care policy, and good ol’ humor. So pull up a chair, maybe a nice iced coffee, and dig in………..
……………………………………….
Here are a few of many injuries in the news due to fireworks.:
N.Y. man loses arm in fireworks blast
Man seriously injured in fireworks accident at Cross Lake
Colo. Springs man injured by homemade fireworks
Children injured by fireworks brought to hospital
Girl Hurt in Fireworks Accident in Platte City
3 Hurt In Blue Springs Fireworks Accident
……………………………….
I am not a fan of guns, but my husband is.  He doesn’t hunt, but collects antique guns (Civil War Era) and has a concealed carry permit.  It is with interest that I have been following the news story on gun rights vs public safety.  NPR has done a nice job of covering this:  High Court Ruling Fuels Chicago's Handgun Debate
Twice in two years, the U.S. Supreme Court has struck down handgun bans in major American cities.
More On Gun Rulings
Some D.C. Residents Say It's Too Hard To Get A Gun July 5, 2010
The first ruling two years ago overturned a gun law in Washington, D.C. The second high court decision, which came last week, involved a similar statute in Chicago.
The City Council quickly changed the law — and it is now legal to own a handgun in the Windy City.
Gun rights advocates say Chicago residents will be safer from violent crime. But those advocating gun control say the opposite: that guns in the home put more people at risk………….
………………………..
As I have seen many injuries due to power saws, I paid close attention to this NPR story:  Sharp Edge: One Man's Quest To Improve Saw Safety
Table saws are by far the most dangerous tools used by woodworkers and do-it-yourself enthusiasts. Every year around the U.S., more than 3,000 people cut off their fingers or thumbs in table saw accidents, according to data from the Consumer Product Safety Commission. And 30,000 end up in emergency rooms with other injuries.
One entrepreneur has developed a safety device called SawStop that prevents those injuries. But the power tool industry has chosen not to adopt the technology. And because of that, power tool manufacturers now face a growing number of lawsuits………
……………………………..
Brendan Marracco’s story is told by Lizette Alvarez in the New York Times:  Spirit Intact, Soldier Reclaims His Life
……..In the nearly 15 months since, Specialist Marrocco has pushed past pain and exhaustion to learn to use his four prosthetics, though he can walk for only 15 minutes at a time. He has met sports stars like Jorge Posada and Tiger Woods — and become something of a star himself here at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, where his moxie and humor are an inspiration to hundreds of other wounded service members. He has also met, fallen in love with and proposed marriage to a young woman who sees what is there rather than what is missing, though Specialist Marrocco has lately been questioning the relationship……….
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Dr Anonymous’ BTR show will be on summer break until late August.

Upcoming shows (9pm ET)
Jul-Aug: Summer Break
8/26: Dr. A Show 3rd Anniversary

Thursday, June 10, 2010

Melanoma of the Nail Matrix

Updated 3/2017 -- photos and all links (except to my own posts) removed as many no longer active. 

Two recent articles in the Archives of Dermatology serve as a reminder that melanoma may occur under the finger nail in the nail matrix.
The first one (full references for both below) used slides and prepared information from 12 cases to “test” dermatologist. Here is one of the examples given in the paper:
Nevus. A, Clinical features; B, nail plate dermoscopy; C, intraoperative dermoscopy. ABCDEF rule information: A (age, 35 years), C (change in band at 2 years; it became enlarged or darker), D (digit, third finger, right hand), and F (no family or personal history of melanoma)

Only 46-55% made the correct diagnosis of nail matrix melanoma in situ in this study. The level of expertise did not statistically influence the correct diagnosis.
Early diagnosis of melanoma of the nail unit is challenging. The tumor most often presents with a longitudinal nail pigmentation (longitudinal melanonychia), but this is not a specific sign for melanoma.
Longitudinal melanonychia can also be caused by numerous nonmalignant conditions that include nevi of the nail matrix, benign melanocytic hyperplasia (nail matrix lentigo), and a number of inflammatory, traumatic, or iatrogenic nail disorders that induce the activation of the nail matrix melanocytes.
Features on clinical examination that are suggestive but not pathognomonic of melanoma include inhomogeneous pigmentation with bands or lines of different colors, presence of nail plate fissuring or splitting, rapid enlargement of the band, a proximal part of the band that is broader than the distal (triangular shape), blurred lateral borders, and pigmentation of the periungueal skin.
These features have been summarized in the ABCDEF rule for diagnosis of nail melanoma and may help clinicians in distinguishing "nonalarming" from "alarming" bands. Each letter indicates features that are associated with an increased risk of melanoma:
  • A (age as peak incidence of nail melanoma is between 50 and 70 years. A also reminds us of most commonly affected races: African Americans, Asians, and Native Americans).
  • B (band: black to brown, breadth > than 3 mm, blurred borders)
  • C (change: enlarging or darkening)
  • D (digit: most fingernail melanomas affect the dominant hand)
  • E (extension of the pigmentation to the surrounding tissues)
  • F (family or personal history of melanoma)
The second one reminds us that melanoma in the nail matrix location (nail apparatus melanoma or NAM) is associated with a poor prognosis, mainly because of a delay in diagnosis. Too often diagnosed at an invasive stage. The authors note this is particularly true in cases involving amelanotic melanoma. They report 3 cases of in situ amelanotic melanoma with clinical lichenoid features, concluding that chronic unexplained monodactylic nail dystrophy should be investigated histologically.
All three of their patients (ages 39 to 60 yrs) presented with nail alterations characterized by lichenoid changes with longitudinal striation, distal splitting, and nail plate atrophy. Histologic examination revealed in situ amelanotic melanoma extending from the proximal matrix up to the distal part of the nail bed. (photo from article)
The authors give us the background on amelanotic NAM:
Amelanotic NAM represents 20% to 30% of ungual melanoma cases compared with less than 7% of the other cutaneous melanomas.
It usually presents as a chronic paronychia, a torpid granulomatous ulceration, a wartlike keratotic tumor, or a pyogenic granuloma.
It is usually located in the periungual folds or in the nail bed.
Clinical misdiagnosis, which is particularly frequent in amelanotic melanoma, is responsible for a delay in diagnosis as well as a poor prognosis.
REFERENCES
Dermatologists' Accuracy in Early Diagnosis of Melanoma of the Nail Matrix; Nilton Di Chiacchio; Sergio Henrique Hirata; Mauro Yoshiaki Enokihara; Nilceo S. Michalany; Gabriella Fabbrocini; Antonella Tosti; Arch Dermatol. 2010;146(4):382-387.
In Situ Amelanotic Melanoma of the Nail Unit Mimicking Lichen Planus: Report of 3 Cases; Josette André; Isabelle Moulonguet; Sophie Goettmann-Bonvallot; Arch Dermatol. 2010;146(4):418-421.

Monday, April 19, 2010

Finger and Wrist Exercises

Updated 3/2017 -- photos and all links (except to my own posts) removed as many no longer active. and it was easier than checking each one.

A few weeks ago I received an email from a reader who appreciated my past post on posture.  She then requested information on exercises and prevention of finger/hand issues from computer/keyboard use.  I replied that I would work on it.
Thanks to TBTAM who reminded me of this with this tweet last week.
Duration of EMR use and upper extremity musculoskeletal symptoms correlated. And I was blaming the blog.... http://bit.ly/bVbOvU

One of my earliest post (June 3, 2007) was  “Good Posture for Sewing (or Blogging)”.  Posture makes a huge difference in body mechanics, be it at the computer, sewing machine, or in the operating room.  Poor body mechanics lead to or contribute to many chronic use issues (ie back pain, carpal tunnel, cubital tunnel).
You and I should consider taking breaks every 30-60 minutes from our computer/desk/sewing machine work and do some stretching exercises for our wrists and hands and body. 
Most involve simply putting all the joints through as full range of motion as possible.
Flex (bend) and extend (straighten) each finger.  Spread your fingers as wide apart as possible and hold for a count of 5.
Flex and extend the wrist.  Move the wrist in a circular fashion with the fingers both relaxed and in a gentle fist. 
Straighten the elbow.  Rotate the forearm so the hand is palm up and then palm down.
Don’t forget the shoulders.  Shrug your shoulders and down, roll then in gentle circles.  Raise your arms above your head with your palms meeting.  Move your arm/shoulder as if you were swimming so as to move the joint through its full range.
Neck Rolls – relax your shoulders and let your head roll forward. Slowly rotate your head in a circle. Repeat five times.

E-Hand.com has some nice photos (including this one) with instructions on some exercises intended to help prevent carpal tunnel syndrome.
Extend and stretch both wrists and fingers acutely as if they are in a hand-stand position. Hold for a count of 5.


Here are some sites with more exercises:
Typing Games to improve dexterity
Slide show: Hand exercises for people with arthritis by Mayo Clinic Staff
Finger Exercises for Arthritis By Kate McQuade, eHow
How to do Wrist Exercises to Help Arthritis in the Hand By LivingWellYoga, eHow
Finger injuries - causes, treatments and recovery exercises