Traumatic below-elbow amputations

Orthopedics. 2007 Feb;30(2):120-6. doi: 10.3928/01477447-20070201-16.

Abstract

Prehension, intelligence, and erect posture distinguish humans from lower animals. Hands are instrumental for our survival and welfare. We use our hands when we work, recreate, and communicate. A handshake, a touch, a sign, or signal has significant social and communicative meanings. Hands play a major role in defining the skill level of our activities and our level of social expression and integration. Indeed, refined psychomotor precision of hand function may distinguish some individuals among us, gifting society with its more skilled craftsmen, surgeons, artisans, musicians, athletes, and the like in a highly digital world. For others, their hands are critical in providing and caring for their families. Injury severity scores may identify the majority of patients that require amputation; however, injury severity scoring system predictions in individual patients may be problematic and should be used with caution. Amputees require comprehensive multidisciplinary treatment and compassion so that they can successfully overcome their losses. Ultimately, the patients must change, adjust, and adapt to successfully reintegrate themselves into their families, peer groups, job settings, and society as a whole. Early amputation may decrease the incidence and severity of phantom pain compared to amputation after the failure of reconstruction. Early prosthetic fitting, training, and physical rehabilitation; early psychological and sociological support; and early return to work facilitate successful functional recovery. Psychological recovery may be a more arduous and extended process than physical recovery. We must teach our amputees from the outset to use their losses as an incentive for success, assist them to regain their quality of life, and encourage them to act as role models for and to educate others.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Accidents, Occupational
  • Amputation, Traumatic* / complications
  • Amputation, Traumatic* / psychology
  • Amputation, Traumatic* / rehabilitation
  • Artificial Limbs
  • Female
  • Forearm Injuries / etiology
  • Forearm Injuries / surgery*
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Postoperative Complications*
  • Sickness Impact Profile*