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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 102-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 83 - 83
1 Aug 2020
Behman A Wright JG Lee JM Feldman B Doria A Fusco C
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The primary goal of this study was to understand the subjective impact of a diagnosis of Simple Bone Cyst on children with regards to activity participation and psychosocial development. We aimed to explore the concepts of labeling, embodiment and activity participation to understand the impact of SBC.

This was a qualitative study. Ten children between the ages of 4 and 17 years with SBC and their families participated in semi-structured interviews related to activity participation, social interactions and psychological impact of SBC. Interview questions were derived from psychology, sociology and philosophy literatures pertaining to illness and activity, sense of embodiment, self-concept and interactions with the social environment. Interviews were transcribed and analyzed using thematic analysis.

First, children and families view SBC as an injury more than an illness and did not experience labeling or significant changes in embodiment. Second, SBCs cause anxiety in children related fear of fracture or pain, however normal function and activity participation were maintained. Third, there were significant shortcomings identified in the communication and the decision-making process between families and physicians regarding SBC management.

SBC as a benign disease does not neatly fit into the category of illness or injury based on children's experiences. Children who previously perceived themselves as normal feel different and not normal following diagnosis with SBC. The experience of parents is largely one of anxiety, and much of that anxiety is derived from the uncertainty over the treatment plans for their child.

The proposed framework of normality allows for the more temporary and fluid changes in perception experienced by the children in our study. The results of this study suggest that the current decision-making process in SBC is unsatisfactory leading to anxiety and worry. Parents felt pressure to make decisions regarding surgery without feeling that they sufficient information. Though understanding how children experience SBCs and how parents experience the treatment course of their child with SBC, we can shared decision-making as a potential way to reduce parents' anxiety and limit negative experience in children.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 91-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 270 - 270
1 May 2009
Tos P Lee JM Raimondo S Papalia I Fornaro M Geuna S Battiston B
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Aims: Multiple nerve repair by means of a Y-shaped nerve guide represents a good model for studying the specificity of peripheral nerve fiber regeneration. Here we have employed this model for investigating the specificity of axonal regeneration in mixed nerves of the rat forelimb model. Specificity of nerve regeneration can be defined as the ability of the nerve fibers of a peripheral nerve, after a lesion. Tree types of specificity on nerve regeneration has been postulated: “tissue specificity” (the preferential reinnervation of distal nerve tissue versus other types of tissue), topographic specificity (regenerating nerve fibers are preferentially attracted by analogous distal pathways (e.g. preferential regeneration along tibial nerve pathways by tibial nerve fibers), and end-organ specificity, which is the hypothesis that distal end-organs (muscle vs. sensory targets) specifically attracts the respective (motor vs. sensory) regenerating nerve fibers. Exists no agreement regarding the presence and features of the two last type of specificity.

Methods: The left median and ulnar nerves, in adult female rats, were transected and repaired with a 14-mm Y-shaped conduit. The proximal end of the Y-shaped conduit was sutured to the proximal stump of either the median nerve or the ulnar nerve. Ten months after surgery, rats were tested for functional recovery of each median and ulnar nerve. Quantitative morphology of regenerated myelinated nerve fibers was then carried out by the two-dimensional disector technique.

Results: Results showed that partial recovery of both median and ulnar nerve motor function was regained in all experimental groups. Performance in the grasping test was significantly lower when the ulnar nerve was used as the proximal stump. Ulnar test assessment showed no significant difference between the two Y-shaped repair groups. The number of regenerated nerve fibers was significantly higher in the median nerve irrespectively of the donor nerve, maintaining the same proportion of myelinated fibers between the two nerves (about 60% median and 40% ulnar). On the other hand, nerve fiber size and myelin thickness were significantly larger in both distal nerves when the median nerve was used as the proximal donor nerve stump. G-ratio and myelin thickness/ axon diameter ratio returned to normal values in all experimental groups.

Conlusions: These results demonstrate that combined Y-shaped-tubulization repair of median and ulnar nerves permits the functional recovery of both nerves, independently from the proximal donor nerve employed, and that tissue, and not topographic, specificity guides nerve fiber regeneration in major forelimb mixed nerves of rats.