Concepedia

TLDR

Complete absence of tension at the suture site is regarded as the most important factor for a successful nerve repair. The study describes a nerve‑grafting technique derived from experimental research. The method uses a dissecting microscope to isolate and match major and minor fasciculi of the median and ulnar nerves, resecting scarred ends, and inserting tension‑free sural nerve grafts—typically five or six in the median nerve and four in the ulnar nerve—secured with a single fine suture and carefully adjusted coaptation. In 65 nerve lesions, tension‑free grafting produced superior regeneration compared to moderate‑tension end‑to‑end suturing, and detailed outcomes from 33 median and 32 ulnar nerve cases confirm the technique’s effectiveness.

Abstract

A technique of nerve-grafting based on experimental studies is described. Complete absence of tension at the suture site is regarded as the most important factor for a successful nerve repair. Nerve regeneration after grafting without tension is much better than after direct end-to-end suture under moderate tension even though the regenerating axons must cross two suture lines when grafts are used. The technique involves use of a dissecting microscope to perform an intraneural dissection of both nerve stumps to isolate the major fasciculi individually and the minor ones in groups. The scarred ends of the fasciculi are then resected, the mobilized fasciculi in each nerve stump are matched, and grafts, usually from the sural nerve, are inserted loosely with no tension to bridge the gaps between the matched fasciculi or groups of fasciculi—five or six grafts in the median nerve and usually four in the ulnar nerve. Only one very fine suture is used to fix each end of a graft and the coaption between the ends of the graft and the corresponding fasciculi is carefully adjusted using the dissecting microscope. The results using this technique in thirty-three median and thirty-two ulnar nerve lesions of different types are presented in detail.