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Toe Transfer in Congenital Hand Malformations
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2001
Year
Upper ExtremityMotor ControlAnatomyOrthopaedic SurgeryCongenital DisordersCongenital Hand AbnormalitiesHealth SciencesFifty-eight PatientsRehabilitationHand SurgeryHand TherapyMovement DisordersDevelopmental AnomalyThumb HypoplasiaTransferred ToeToe TransferHand TraumaHuman MovementMedicine
Fifty-eight patients with congenital hand abnormalities underwent 65 toe-to-hand transfers. Symbrachydactyly (51 cases) was the most frequent indication. Forty-seven second toe-to-hand transfers were performed in 44 patients. The mean follow-up time was 5.2 years. Two failures occurred in cases in which only one artery was anastomosed; no failures were noted when more than one artery fed the transfer. Two patients with a single second-toe transfer presented with lateral instability of the transferred metatarsophalangeal joint. The mean active range of motion was 38 degrees, with a mean extension lag of 25 degrees. The mean two-point discrimination was 5 mm. Forty-one patients used the transferred toe well, when performing activities of daily living and playing games. Toe-to-hand transfer, prior to the establishment of the grip pattern, facilitates integration of the transfer.