The original technique was first described by Eden in 1924 and verified by Lange in the 1950s. The rhomboid major and rhomboid minor were transferred laterally from the medial border of the scapula to the infraspinatous fossa, and the levator scapulae was transferred laterally to the spine of the scapula, near the acromion.
Modified Eden-Lange procedure
The procedure was first modified by Bigliani et all in 1996. The change was transferring the rhomboid minor to the supraspinatous fossa to allow the rhomboid minor to better replicate line of pull of the middle trapezius.
The triple tendon transfer was described by Elhassan et all at the Mayo Clinic in 2015, and since 2010 no other technique for intractable trapezius palsy has been used there. Like the original and modified Eden-Lange procedures, the levator scapulae is transferred to the scapular spine. In the T3 transfer, rather than transferring the rhomboids to the scapular fossae, they are transferred to the scapular spine, which better replicates the trapezius’ action of scapular upward rotation. In detail, the rhomboid minor is transferred to just medial of the transferred levator scapulae, and the rhomboid major is transferred to the medial scapular spine.
Additional muscle deficits can contraindicate tendon transfer, namely the serratus anterior muscle or the muscles-to-be-transferred themselves. Serratus anterior muscle deficit is another cause of scapular winging and decreases the efficacy of an Eden-Lange procedure, but it can be overcome with a simultaneous pectoralis major transfer. Muscular dystrophy often contraindicates tendon transfer, because the muscles transferred are either dystrophic or capable of becoming dystrophic. A pertinent example is facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy, which commonly affects the trapezius, causing a need for scapular stabilization, but also commonly affects other periscapular muscles, which contraindicates the transfer. Collagen disorders contraindicate tendon transfers in general, including the Eden-Lange procedure. Scapulothoracic fusion, a salvage procedure, can be done when tendon transfer is contraindicated or in cases of failed tendon transfers.
Risks
The dorsal scapular nerve is at risk for intraoperative injury when detaching the rhomboid and levator scapulae insertions due to its proximity to the medial scapular border. This is of particular concern because the dorsal scapular nerve innervates all three muscles transferred in the Eden-Lange procedure.