Between November 2001 and January 2008, 56 patients (68 hands) out of 110 patients operated for spastic hand deformities, presented with spasticity of the intrinsic muscles of the long fingers (interosseii and the abductor pollicis brevis). All patients were adults (mean age 42.1 years). The surgical indication was discussed during multidisciplinary consultations with selective nerve blocks enabling us to distinguish between extrinsic and intrinsic pathologies on the one hand and muscular spasticity and tendon retractions on the other hand. The aim of the treatment was defined in a "contract" signed with the patient and/or his family. It was hygienic, aesthetic and analgesic in 15 cases, hygienic and analgesic in 32 cases and functional in 21 cases. Four hands were treated by neurectomy of the ulnar nerve's motor ramus, 54 by tenotomies of the interosseous muscles, 18 by tenotomy of the abductor digiti minimi, six by metacarpal disinsertion of the interosseous muscles. On a total of 67 hands operated associating surgery of the extrinsic and intrinsic flexors, 63 had good primary results as defined in the contract. We noted four relapses, two of which required revision. The authors emphasize the frequency of mixed spastic hands in adults after cerebral palsy. However modest the functional results may be, correction of hygienic and pain problems of non-functional hands as well as aesthetic improvements make surgery of the mixed spastic hand a successful intervention, which should be shared.
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