• PURPOSE
    • With nerve or tendon surgery, the results of thumb reconstruction to treat radial nerve paralysis are suboptimal. The goals of this study were to describe the anatomy of the deep branch of the posterior interosseous nerve (PIN) to the thumb extensor muscles (DBPIN), and to report the clinical results of transferring the distal anterior interosseous nerve (DAIN) to the DBPIN.
  • METHODS
    • The PIN was dissected in 12 fresh upper limbs. Myelinated nerve fibers in the DBPIN and DAIN were counted. Five patients with radial nerve paralysis underwent transfer of the motor branch to the flexor carpi radialis to the PIN and a motor branch of the pronator teres to the extensor carpi radialis brevis. In addition, these patients had selective reconstruction of thumb motion by transferring the DAIN to the DBPIN, through either a combined volar and dorsal approach (n = 2) or a single dorsal approach (n = 3) with division of the interosseous membrane.
  • RESULTS
    • At the origin of the abductor pollicis longus, the DBPIN divided into a lateral branch that innervated the abductor pollicis longus and extensor pollicis brevis, and a medial branch that innervated the extensor pollicis longus and extensor index proprius. The number of myelinated nerve fibers in the DAIN corresponded to 65% of that of the DBPIN. In each of the 5 patients, full thumb motion at the trapeziometacarpal joint was restored with no, or minimal, extension lag at the metacarpophalangeal (MCP) joint.
  • CONCLUSIONS
    • The anatomy of the DBPIN is predictable. Transferring the DAIN to the DBPIN is feasible through a single dorsal approach, allowing full recovery of thumb motion.
  • TYPE OF STUDY/LEVEL OF EVIDENCE
    • Therapeutic V.