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Clinical Trial Summary

POPB is a consequence of the stretching of the nerve roots (C5, C6 + / C7, C8 or T1) of the brachial plexus at birth. One third of patients will have sequelae. The most common is the appearance of a deficit of passive and active mobilities in the movements in external rotation of the shoulder especially in external rotation (RE) elbow to the body, despite daily rehabilitation. At present, this stiffness is attributed to an imbalance between the external rotator muscles (mainly infraspinatus) that would be atrophied and the internal rotator muscles (subscapularis, pectoralis major, latissimus dorsi) that would be slightly affected In case of no or negative RE from the age of 1 year, there is a surgical indication to operate these children. At present, surgery to lift internal retractions is the only therapy used, but despite this surgery and intensive rehabilitation, in some patients mobility deficits re-occur in a few years. Thus, some teams systematically perform a muscle transfer to strengthen the outer rotator muscles deficit during the initial operation. Other teams (of which principal investigator is part) do this transfer only secondarily and in some patients. Investigators lack objective and scientific criteria for the indication of this second muscle transfer surgery and the etiology of retractions is not clearly defined. In humans, subscapularis is innervated by the C5 and C6 roots, which are constantly affected in POPB. It can be assumed that subscapularis may have an atrophy in POPB patients. To date, no anatomopathological study has been performed on the internal / external rotator muscles of patients with POPB that can give indications on recurrences. Based on our clinical observations and literature data, the main hypothese is there is amyotrophy of subscapularis and / or infraspinatus in POPB patients with shoulder stiffness.


Clinical Trial Description

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Study Design


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NCT number NCT03771144
Study type Interventional
Source University Hospital, Montpellier
Contact
Status Terminated
Phase N/A
Start date June 11, 2019
Completion date June 23, 2020