Abstract

Painful stump neuromas in lower limb amputees are a significant burden on a person's quality of life due to interference with wearing prostheses and therefore the ability to walk. Treating painful stump neuromas is a challenge perhaps reflected by the lack of clinical guidelines. A systematic review was conducted to evaluate the efficacy of all treatments tried in the management of symptomatic neuromas in the lower limb amputation stump in order to establish whether one treatment is superior. Twenty-two studies were included in the final review which examined 14 different treatments both surgical and nonsurgical. Results showed that no single treatment showed superiority. The 4 treatments that showed most promise included targeted nerve implantation, traction neurectomy, nerve-to-nerve anastomosis, and perineurial gluing. The short follow-up times and small sample sizes of the studies highlighted the need for more robust clinical studies.

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