Abstract
Cervical spinal cord injury is a life-altering event that profoundly affects an individual’s upper extremity function. Nerve transfer surgeries have been shown to restore more natural movement and fine motor control in this population. At present, there is no consensus on how to evaluate the efficacy of these restorative surgeries. The purpose of this work was to perform a comprehensive review of the existing literature and describe the outcome measures used. We hypothesized that the assessments will be heterogeneous across studies and will incompletely capture the effect of nerve transfers on upper extremity motion in cervical spinal cord injury. A search strategy was designed and a review of multiple databases (Embase.com, Ovid-Medline All, and Scopus) yielded 481 articles; 26 unique studies met inclusion criteria and underwent analysis. Both manual muscle strength testing and video content were presented in the majority of studies. Outcome assessments including myometry, functional outcomes measures (such as the grasp and release test), patient-reported outcomes (including generic, extremity, and disease-specific types), and custom de novo questionnaires were used variably across studies. Future work should focus on standardizing outcomes measures in the field and developing and incorporating kinematic analysis to quantify the intricate, coordinated, and precise movement attained after nerve transfer surgery in the setting of cervical spinal cord injury.
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