首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
The use of free groin flaps in children   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The free groin flap is a well-established method of skin coverage. Although its use in children has been reported, there have been no published series specifically in such cases. The authors report 33 consecutive cases of free groin flaps in children in their unit over a period of 9 years (1992 to 2001). Tissue transfer was performed to provide soft-tissue coverage during reconstruction of congenital defects and tumor resection and following trauma. Twenty-six cases (79 percent) involved the upper limb, six cases (18 percent) involved the lower limb, and one case involved the head. The complication rate compares favorably with similar series published for adults, with only two complete failures (6 percent), three (9 percent) minor donor-site complications (superficial wound infection, hypertrophic scarring, and dog-ears), and nine flaps requiring debulking. The reexploration rate was 24 percent, with seven of the eight flaps undergoing reexploration surviving. The groin flap is a reliable flap that can be used safely in children, with minimal morbidity.  相似文献   

2.
Regional pedicled myocutaneous flaps are usually the best choice for soft-tissue coverage of full-thickness chest wall defects. As defects increase in size, microsurgical techniques are necessary to augment blood flow to pedicled flaps or to provide free flap coverage from distant sites. This study retrospectively reviews all microsurgical procedures performed at one institution for the coverage of full-thickness chest wall defects. Twenty-five cases of full-thickness chest wall reconstruction are reviewed. There were 20 free flaps and five supercharged pedicled flaps. A rectus abdominis myocutaneous flap (free or supercharged) was used in 20 cases, and a filet free flap following forequarter amputation was used in five patients. Large skeletal defects were repaired with a Marlex mesh/methylmethacrylate sandwich prosthesis. There was 100 percent flap survival and one case of minor, partial flap loss. The prosthesis remained effectively covered in all cases. Five patients required ventilatory support for up to 10 days postoperatively. There were three perioperative deaths due to multisystem failure. Microsurgical techniques are extremely useful for reconstruction of complicated, composite chest wall defects. They are indicated when regional pedicled flap options are unavailable or inadequate. These flaps have a 100 percent success rate and uniformly result in stable soft-tissue coverage.  相似文献   

3.
Limb salvage after extremity tumor ablation may include the use of allograft bone. The primary complication of this method is infection of the allograft, which can lead to limb loss in up to 50 percent of cases. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of primary muscle flap coverage in the setting of allograft bone limb salvage surgery. This study is a prospective review of all patients with flap coverage of extremity allografts over the 10-year period 1991 to 2001. There were 20 patients (11 male and nine female patients) with an average age of 28 years (range, 6 to 72 years). Flap coverage was primary in 16 patients and delayed in four. Delayed coverage was performed for failed wounds that did not have a primary soft-tissue flap. Pathologic findings included osteosarcoma in nine patients, Ewing sarcoma in five patients, malignant fibrohistiocytoma in two patients, chondrosarcoma in two patients, synovial sarcoma in one patient, and leiomyosarcoma in one patient. Allograft reconstruction was performed for the upper extremity in 12 patients and for the lower extremity in eight patients. Flap reconstruction was accomplished with 20 pedicle flaps in 17 patients (latissimus dorsi, 12; gastrocnemius, four; soleus, three; and fasciocutaneous flap, one) and four free flaps (rectus abdominis, three; latissimus dorsi, one) in four patients. All pedicled flaps survived. There was one flap failure in the entire series, which was a free rectus abdominis flap. This case resulted in the only limb loss noted. The follow-up period ranged from 1 to 50 months (average, 12.35 months). At the time of final follow-up, three patients were dead of disease and 17 were alive with intact extremities. The overall limb salvage rate in the setting of bone allograft and soft-tissue flap coverage was 95 percent (19 of 20). Reoperation for bone-related complications was required in 50 percent (two of four) of cases receiving delayed flap coverage compared with 19 percent (three of 16) of patients with primary flap coverage (statistically not significant). The results of this study support the use of soft-tissue flap coverage for allograft limb reconstruction. In this series, no limb was lost in the setting of a viable flap. Reoperation was markedly reduced in the setting of primary flap coverage. Pedicled or microvascular transfer of well-vascularized muscle can be used to wrap the allograft and minimize devastating wound complications potentially leading to loss of allograft and limb.  相似文献   

4.
Advances in free-tissue transfer have allowed for lower limb salvage in patients with significant peripheral vascular disease and limb-threatening soft-tissue wounds. The authors retrospectively reviewed their 10-year experience with free flaps for limb salvage in patients with peripheral vascular disease to assess postoperative complication rates and long-term functional outcome. They identified all patients undergoing free-tissue transfer with significant peripheral vascular disease and otherwise unreconstructible soft-tissue defects. Charts were reviewed for perioperative and long-term outcome. Parameters studied included perioperative morbidity and mortality, flap success, bypass graft patency, ambulatory results, and long-term limb and patient survival. Survival data were analyzed using life-table analysis, Kaplan-Meier survival analysis, and Cox testing. A total of 79 flaps were examined in 75 patients with peripheral vascular disease from July of 1990 to November of 1999. All patients would have required a major amputation had free-tissue transfer not been performed. Mean age was 60 years, average hospital stay was 32 days, and perioperative mortality was 5 percent. Within the first 30 days after operation, there were four cases of primary flap loss, and another two were lost as the result of bypass graft failure (8 percent); five of these cases resulted in amputation. There were no primary flap failures after 30 days. Follow-up ranged to 91 months (mean, 24 months). During this time, another 14 limbs were lost, most commonly because of progressive gangrene and/or infection in sites remote from the still-viable free flap. Using Kaplan-Meier survival analysis, 5-year flap survival was 77 percent, limb salvage 63 percent, and patient survival 67 percent. Sixty-six percent of patients were able to ambulate independently with the use of their reconstructed limb at least 1 year after hospital discharge, although some of these later went on to amputation. Free-tissue transfer for lower extremity reconstruction can be performed with acceptable morbidity and mortality in patients with peripheral vascular disease. Flap loss is low, and limb salvage, ambulation, and long-term survival rates in these patients are excellent.  相似文献   

5.
The superficial circumflex iliac artery perforator (SCIP) flap differs from the established groin flap in that it is nourished by only a perforator of the superficial circumflex iliac system and has a short segment (3 to 4 cm in length) of this vascular system. Three cases in which free superficial circumflex iliac artery perforator flaps were successfully transferred for coverage of soft-tissue defects in the limb are described in this article. The advantages of this flap are as follows: no need for deeper and longer dissection for the pedicle vessel, a shorter flap elevation time, possible thinning of the flap with primary defatting, the possibility of an adiposal flap with customized thickness for tissue augmentation, a concealed donor site, minimal donor-site morbidity, and the availability of a large cutaneous vein as a venous drainage system. The disadvantages are the need for dissection for a smaller perforator and an anastomosing technique for small-caliber vessels of less than 1.0 mm.  相似文献   

6.
The groin flap in reparative surgery of the hand   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The historical literature of the use of axial vascular pattern flaps from the hypogastric and iliofemoral regions in reparative surgery of the hand is concisely reviewed. Thirty-six iliofemoral (groin) flaps were utilized for delayed primary resurfacing and secondary reconstruction of defects of the hand and forearm. Two flaps (6 percent) were complicated by partial necrosis. We caution against the immediate resurfacing (within 24 hours of injury) of acute crushed hand wounds by distant flaps. The immediate application of a healthy flap on a soiled or crushed wound invites complications of local tissue necrosis, infection, and subsequent loss of the flap. When distant flaps are indicated for coverage of acute hand wounds, delayed primary coverage following complete removal of all nonviable tissue is a safe and reliable regimen. It is advantageous to design the serviceable portion of the flap on the distal area of the vascular territory of the groin flap. Thoughtful yet "radical" defatting can be performed on the lateral portion of the groin flap territory. Constructed in this way, the long medial base of the groin flap allows freedom for movement at the wrist and metacarpophalangeal and interphalangeal joints, thus decreasing edema and stiffness. In the management of soft-tissue defects in the hand requiring distant flap coverage, we choose to utilize the conventional groin flap in preference to the microvascular free flap when both techniques will deliver equal results.  相似文献   

7.
Reconstruction of composite defects of the mandible is a challenging problem. Although the use of an osteocutaneous free flap, alone or in combination with another soft-tissue free flap, is generally accepted to be optimal, the bony reconstruction is sometimes undervalued, especially when the cancer is advanced. In such situations, reconstruction is often performed with a reconstruction plate covered with a soft-tissue free flap. Between January of 1997 and July of 2000, 80 patients with composite or extensive composite oromandibular defects underwent treatment with a reconstruction plate and a soft-tissue free flap. All of the patients were male, and the ages of the patients at the time of treatment ranged from 32 to 78 years (mean, 51 years). Tumors were classified as stage IV in 56 patients (70 percent), whereas the remaining 24 patients (30 percent) had recurrent carcinomas. The titanium mandibular reconstruction system manufactured by Stryker (Freiburg, Germany) was used to bridge the mandibular defects. The soft-tissue free flaps used for wound and plate coverage were as follows: anterolateral thigh flap (n = 75), radial forearm flap (n = 3), transverse rectus abdominis myocutaneous flap (n = 1), and tensor fasciae latae flap (n = 1). Five patients with recurrent carcinomas and 10 with stage IV carcinomas (18.75 percent) died 2 to 6 months after the operation and were excluded from the study. The remaining 65 patients were monitored for an average follow-up period of 22 months (range, 6 to 40 months). During that period, one or more complications occurred for 45 patients (69.2 percent). Plate exposure was the most common complication and was observed for 30 patients (46.15 percent). Twenty of the 65 patients (30.8 percent) required secondary salvage reconstruction with a fibula osteoseptocutaneous flap. The decision to perform a secondary salvage procedure was based on the general health of the patient, the extent of local disease, and the severity of the complications. Patients underwent salvage operations after an average of 11.5 months (range, 6 to 26 months). The major reasons for the second operation were as follows: reconstruction plate exposure (n = 12), soft-tissue deficiency and mandibular contour deformation of the lateral face (n = 7), intraoral contracture and lack of a gingivobuccal sulcus (n = 6), trismus (n = 4), and osteoradionecrosis of the mandible (n = 2). The total flap survival rate was 90 percent (18 of 20 free flaps). In two cases, the skin paddles of the fibula osteoseptocutaneous flaps exhibited partial failure and were revised with pedicled pectoralis major and deltopectoral flaps. The reconstruction plate and free soft-tissue flap procedure for the reconstruction of composite defects of the oromandibular region has many late complications, which eventually necessitate reconstruction of the mandible with an osteocutaneous free flap.  相似文献   

8.
Tissue of amputated or nonsalvageable limbs may be used for reconstruction of complex defects resulting from tumor and trauma. This is the "spare parts" concept.By definition, fillet flaps are axial-pattern flaps that can function as composite-tissue transfers. They can be used as pedicled or free flaps and are a beneficial reconstruction strategy for major defects, provided there is tissue available adjacent to these defects.From 1988 to 1999, 104 fillet flap procedures were performed on 94 patients (50 pedicled finger and toe fillets, 36 pedicled limb fillets, and 18 free microsurgical fillet flaps).Nineteen pedicled finger fillets were used for defects of the dorsum or volar aspect of the hand, and 14 digital defects and 11 defects of the forefoot were covered with pedicled fillets from adjacent toes and fingers. The average size of the defects was 23 cm2. Fourteen fingers were salvaged. Eleven ray amputations, two extended procedures for coverage of the hand, and nine forefoot amputations were prevented. In four cases, a partial or total necrosis of a fillet flap occurred (one patient with diabetic vascular disease, one with Dupuytren's contracture, and two with high-voltage electrical injuries).Thirty-six pedicled limb fillet flaps were used in 35 cases. In 12 cases, salvage of above-knee or below-knee amputated stumps was achieved with a plantar neurovascular island pedicled flap. In seven other cases, sacral, pelvic, groin, hip, abdominal wall, or lumbar defects were reconstructed with fillet-of-thigh or entire-limb fillet flaps. In five cases, defects of shoulder, head, neck, and thoracic wall were covered with upper-arm fillet flaps. In nine cases, defects of the forefoot were covered by adjacent dorsal or plantar fillet flaps. In two other cases, defects of the upper arm or the proximal forearm were reconstructed with a forearm fillet. The average size of these defects was 512 cm2. Thirteen major joints were salvaged, three stumps were lengthened, and nine foot or forefoot amputations were prevented. One partial flap necrosis occurred in a patient with a fillet-of-sole flap. In another case, wound infection required revision and above-knee amputation with removal of the flap.Nine free plantar fillet flaps were performed-five for coverage of amputation stumps and four for sacral pressure sores. Seven free forearm fillet flaps, one free flap of forearm and hand, and one forearm and distal upper-arm fillet flap were performed for defect coverage of the shoulder and neck area. The average size of these defects was 432 cm2. Four knee joints were salvaged and one above-knee stump was lengthened. No flap necrosis was observed. One patient died of acute respiratory distress syndrome 6 days after surgery.Major complications were predominantly encountered in small finger and toe fillet flaps. Overall complication rate, including wound dehiscence and secondary grafting, was 18 percent. This complication rate seems acceptable. Major complications such as flap loss, flap revision, or severe infection occurred in only 7.5 percent of cases. The majority of our cases resulted from severe trauma with infected and necrotic soft tissues, disseminated tumor disease, or ulcers in elderly, multimorbid patients.On the basis of these data, a classification was developed that facilitates multicenter comparison of procedures and their clinical success. Fillet flaps facilitate reconstruction in difficult and complex cases. The spare part concept should be integrated into each trauma algorithm to avoid additional donor-site morbidity and facilitate stump-length preservation or limb salvage.  相似文献   

9.
The internal oblique muscle flap: an anatomic and clinical study   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A new muscle flap based on the ascending branch of the deep circumflex iliac artery is described. Twenty internal oblique muscle flaps have been dissected and studied in 10 fresh cadavers. This muscle flap has been used successfully as a free-tissue transfer in seven lower extremity defects. There was one loss of flap due to venous thrombosis. Other complications included a local wound abscess (one case), partial loss of skin graft (two cases), and arterial thrombosis (one case). There has been no donor-site morbidity. The donor scars are well concealed and no hernias have been observed, the longest follow-up being 9 months. The additional advantages of this flap include its thin, flat shape, excellent vascularity, and ease of application to areas about the ankle, with good aesthetic results. The disadvantages are (1) bloody and tedious dissection and (2) potential for abdominal weakness or hernia in the long run. This muscle flap appears to be excellent as a free flap for coverage of small- to moderate-sized defects of the distal lower extremity and as a pedicle flap for coverage of soft-tissue defects of the groin and anterior perineum.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Stable wound coverage after extensive soft-tissue loss of the upper extremity remains a difficult problem in the management of large defects of the upper limb. To prevent further tissue loss owing to infection or inadequate cover when important structures such as vessels, tendons, nerves, joints, and bones are exposed, various free flaps have been introduced into the therapeutic armamentarium of acute plastic surgical management options. Emergency or delayed early reconstruction has been proposed to prevent chronic infection and further tissue loss. We report a series of 12 emergency and delayed early reconstructions of the forearm, wrist, carpus, metacarpus, and hand using the free rectus abdominis muscle flap with split-skin coverage, demonstrating the versatility of this flap within this special context. Emergency free rectus muscle flap transfer is safe, technically easy, and expandable.  相似文献   

12.
An extensive series reviewing the benefits and drawbacks of use of the gracilis muscle in lower-extremity trauma has not previously been collected. In this series of 50 patients, the use of microvascular free transfer of the gracilis muscle for lower-extremity salvage in acute traumatic wounds and posttraumatic chronic wounds is reviewed. In addition, the wound size, injury patterns, problems, and results unique to the use of the gracilis as a donor muscle for lower-extremity reconstruction are identified. In a 7-year period from 1991 to 1998, 50 patients underwent lower-extremity reconstruction using microvascular free gracilis transfer at the University of Maryland Shock Trauma Center, Johns Hopkins Hospital, and Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center. There were 22 patients who underwent reconstruction for coverage of acute lower-extremity traumatic soft-tissue defects associated with open fractures. The majority of patients were victims of high-energy injuries with 91 percent involving motor vehicle or motorcycle accidents, gunshot wounds, or pedestrians struck by vehicles. Ninety-one percent of the injuries were Gustilo type IIIb tibial fractures and 9 percent were Gustilo type IIIc. The mean soft-tissue defect size was 92.2 cm2. Successful limb salvage was achieved in 95 percent of patients. Twenty-eight patients with previous Gustilo type IIIb tibia-fibula fractures presented with posttraumatic chronic wounds characterized by osteomyelitis or deep soft-tissue infection. Successful free-tissue transfer was accomplished in 26 of 28 patients (93 percent). All but one of the patients in this group who underwent successful limb salvage (26 of 27, or 96 percent) are now free of infection. Use of the gracilis muscle as a free-tissue transfer has been shown to be a reliable and predictable tool in lower-extremity reconstruction, with a flap success and limb salvage rate comparable to those in other large studies.  相似文献   

13.
Free flaps may safely allow meaningful ambulation, durable limb preservation, and better quality of life in patients undergoing resections of soft-tissue cancers of the foot. To prove this, the records of a series of patients at The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center (n = 67) who underwent limb salvage following tumor-related resection (n = 71 procedures) from 1989 to 1999 were retrospectively reviewed. Eighteen patients who were not candidates for local flaps or skin grafts received a total of 20 free flaps to preserve their limbs. Most defects (mean size, 78 cm2; range, 20 to 150 cm2) were on a weight-bearing surface of the foot (nine on a weight-bearing heel, three on a plantar foot); the remainder were on a non-weight-bearing surface (six on dorsum, two on a non-weight-bearing heel). Melanoma was diagnosed in nine cases (50 percent); soft-tissue sarcoma, in seven (39 percent); and squamous cell carcinoma, in two (11 percent). Fasciocutaneous and skin-grafted muscle flaps were used on both weight-bearing and non-weight-bearing surfaces. Free-tissue transfer was successful in 17 of 20 cases (85 percent); the three flap losses occurred in two patients. Minor complications (i.e., small hematoma, partial skin graft loss, and delayed wound healing) occurred in five patients. In all cases of successful free-tissue transfer, patients began partial weight bearing at a mean of 7.4 weeks (range, 2 to 12 weeks), and all ultimately achieved full weight bearing. Sixty-seven percent still required special footwear. In one patient, an ulceration on the weight-bearing portion of the flap resolved after a footwear adjustment. Only one patient was lost to follow-up (mean, 23 months). In the 17 remaining patients, limb salvage succeeded in 15 (88 percent). Of these, nine (60 percent) were alive without evidence of disease, three (20 percent) were alive with disease, and three (20 percent) had died of disease. Local recurrence developed in two patients but was successfully treated by excision and closure. No late amputations were required for local control. Thus, it seems that free flaps help facilitate limb salvage and that they may preserve meaningful limb function in patients who undergo resection of soft-tissue malignancies of the foot.  相似文献   

14.
Eighty-five free flaps were performed in 76 patients for defects in the lower extremity. A new classification of lower-extremity defects was devised to help define the role of free-tissue transfers: group 1, soft-tissue defects; group 2, soft-tissue and bone loss less than 8 cm; group 3, massive soft-tissue and bone loss greater than 8 cm; and group 4, bone defect only. Each group was further divided into clean (A) and infected (B) wounds. Our overall results include resolution of the presenting problem in 82 percent; there were 17 flap losses (20 percent), persistent osteomyelitis in 8, and 10 amputations. This review has prompted us to limit our indications for limb salvage, particularly in group 3B, in patients with compound injuries that include loss of plantar sensation, and in patients with large segments of infected bone.  相似文献   

15.
The objective of this study was to assess the efficacy and reliability of muscle flaps in the treatment of prosthetic graft sepsis. A retrospective analysis was performed to assess the outcome of all patients with prosthetic graft sepsis who were treated with a muscle flap at Groote Schuur Hospital between January of 1991 and July of 2000. The specific end points studied were flap survival, limb salvage rate, and mortality. A total of 27 muscle flaps were raised to cover 24 sites of graft sepsis in 21 patients. Twenty-five flaps were performed primarily and two secondarily. The mortality rate was zero. Limb salvage was achieved in 15 of 21 patients (71 percent), with no recurrent sepsis after an average follow-up period of 36 months. The groin was the most common site of infection, with an 86 percent incidence. Eighteen sartorius flaps were raised in the groin. Seventeen of the 18 sartorius flaps survived (94 percent), and a 71 percent limb salvage was achieved with no recurrent sepsis after 36 months of follow-up. This series supports the use of muscle flaps for the treatment of prosthetic graft sepsis. The sartorius flap has been shown to be reliable as a flap in the groin, with successful limb salvage in the majority of patients.  相似文献   

16.
Management of bone loss that occurs after severe trauma of open lower extremity fractures continues to challenge reconstructive surgeons. Sixty-one patients who had 62 traumatic open lower extremity fractures and combined bone and composite soft-tissue defects were treated with the following protocol: extensive debridement of necrotic tissues, eradication of infection, and vascularization of osteocutaneous tissue for one-stage bone and soft-tissue coverage reconstruction. The mechanism of injury included 49 motorcycle accidents (80.3 percent), five falls (8.2 percent), three crush injuries (4.9 percent), two pedestrian-automobile accidents (3.3 percent), and two motor vehicle accidents (3.3 percent). The bone defects were located in the tibia in 49 patients (79 percent; one patient had bilateral open tibial fractures), in the femur in seven patients (11.3 percent), in the calcaneus bone in four patients (6.5 percent), and in the metatarsal bones in two patients (3.2 percent). The size of soft-tissue defects ranged from 5 x 9 cm to 30 x 17 cm. The average length of the preoperative bony defect was 11.7 cm. The average duration from injury to one-stage reconstruction was 27.1 days, and the average number of previous extensive debridement procedures was 3.4. Fifty patients had vascularized fibula osteoseptocutaneous flaps, six had vascularized iliac osteocutaneous flaps, and five patients had seven combined vascularized rib transfers with serratus anterior muscle and/or latissimus dorsi muscle transfers. One patient received a second combined rib flap because the first combined rib flap failed. The rate of complete flap survival was 88.9 percent (56 of 63 flaps). Two combined vascularized rib transfers with serratus anterior muscle and latissimus dorsi muscle flaps were lost totally (3.2 percent) because of arterial thrombosis and deep infection, respectively. Partial skin flap losses were encountered in the five fibula osteoseptocutaneous flaps (7.9 percent). Postoperative infection for this one-stage reconstruction was 7.9 percent. Excluding the failed flap and the infected/amputated limb, the primary bony union rate after successful free vascularized bone grafting was 88.5 percent (54 of 61 transfers). The average primary union time was 6.9 months. The overall union rate was 96.7 percent (59 of 61 transfers). The average time to overall union was 8.5 months after surgery. Seven transferred vascularized bones had stress fractures, for a rate of 11.5 percent. Donor-site problems were noted in six fibular flaps, in two iliac flaps, and in one rib flap. The fibular donor-site problems were foot drop in one patient, superficial peroneal nerve palsy in one patient, contracture of the flexor hallucis longus muscle in two patients, and skin necrosis after split-thickness skin grafting in two patients. The iliac flap donor-site problems were temporary flank pain in one patient and lateral thigh numbness in the other. One rib flap transfer patient had pleural fibrosis. Transfer of the appropriate combination of vascularized bone and soft-tissue flap with a one-stage procedure provides complex lower extremity defects with successful functional results that are almost equal to the previously reported microsurgical staged procedures and conventional techniques.  相似文献   

17.
When first introduced in 1978, the tensor fasciae latae flap was used both as a free-tissue transfer and as a local rotational flap. Its use as a free flap has diminished as other more appropriate flaps for free-tissue transfer have been described. The tensor fasciae latae flap has remained, however, an instrumental flap in the coverage of anterior and posterior soft-tissue defects around the hip region. The purpose of this paper is to present a new design of the tensor fasciae latae flap in the coverage of trochanteric pressure sores. By essentially creating a VY advancement flap into the trochanteric defect with the tensor fasciae latae, one can cover the trochanteric defect with the best-vascularized portion of the flap and avoid the dog-ear deformity.  相似文献   

18.
Free-tissue transfer in elderly patients   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
A retrospective survey was undertaken to evaluate the success of free-tissue transfer (free flap) in the elderly. During a 70-month period, 199 free flaps were performed in 151 patients at the Western Pennsylvania Hospital, 60 of these involving 47 patients over the age of 60. Primary coverage rates differed significantly between the elderly and younger age groups (68.5 versus 85.3 percent, respectively); however, eventual coverage rates (92.6 versus 96.3 percent), minor complication rates (34.0 versus 34.6 percent), mortality rates (2.1 versus 1.0 percent), flap revision rates (32 percent of patients versus 30 percent), and length of postoperative hospitalization (18.7 versus 18.8 days) were not significantly different in the two groups. Among the elderly, significant increases in flap loss rates were noted with the use of end-to-side arterial anastomosis, placement of the anastomosis within a zone of injury, and the use of the gracilis muscle donor site. Our data suggest that the primary cause of free-flap failure is construction of the anastomosis within a zone of injury. Free-tissue transfer is a valuable option in the repair of tissue defects in the elderly and should not be denied as a treatment because of patient age.  相似文献   

19.
Wei FC  Demirkan F  Chen HC  Chuang DC  Chen SH  Lin CH  Cheng SL  Cheng MH  Lin YT 《Plastic and reconstructive surgery》2001,108(5):1154-60; discussion 1161-2
The indications for free flaps have been more or less clarified; however, the course of reconstruction after the failure of a free flap remains undetermined. Is it better to insist on one's initial choice, or should surgeons downgrade their reconstructive goals? To establish a preliminary guideline, this study was designed to retrospectively analyze the outcome of failed free-tissue transfers performed in the authors hospital. Over the past 8 years (1990 through 1997), 3361 head and neck and extremity reconstructions were performed by free-tissue transfers, excluding toe transplantations. Among these reconstructions, 1235 flaps (36.7 percent) were transferred to the head and neck region, and 2126 flaps (63.3 percent) to the extremities. A total of 101 failures (3.0 percent total plus the partial failure rate) were encountered. Forty-two failures occurred in the head and neck region, and 59 in the extremities. Evaluation of the cases revealed that one of three following approaches to handling the failure was taken: (1) a second free-tissue transfer; (2) a regional flap transfer; or (3) conservative management with debridement, wound care, and subsequent closure by secondary intention, whether by local flaps or skin grafting. In the head and neck region, 17 second free flaps (40 percent) and 15 regional flaps (36 percent) were transferred to salvage the reconstruction, whereas conservative management was undertaken in the remaining 10 cases (24 percent). In the extremities, 37 failures were treated conservatively (63 percent) in addition to 17 second free flaps (29 percent) and three regional flaps (5 percent) used to salvage the failed reconstruction. Two cases underwent amputation (3 percent). The average time elapsed between the failure and second free-tissue transfer was 12 days (range, 2 to 60 days) in the head and neck region and 18 days (range, 2 to 56 days) in the extremities. In a total of 34 second free-tissue transfers at both localizations, there were only three failures (9 percent). However, in the head and neck region, seven of the regional flaps transferred (47 percent) and four cases that were conservatively treated (40 percent) either failed or developed complications that lengthened the reconstruction period because of additional procedures. Six other free-tissue transfers had to be performed to manage these complicated cases. Conservative management was quite successful in the extremities; most patients' wounds healed, although more than one skin-graft procedure was required in 10 patients (27 percent). In conclusion, a second free-tissue transfer is, in general, a relatively more reliable and more effective procedure for the treatment of flap failure in the head and neck region, as well as failed vascularized bone flaps in the reconstruction of the extremities. Conservative treatment may be a simple and valid alternative to second (free) flaps for soft-tissue coverage in extremities with partial and even total losses.  相似文献   

20.
Limb salvage is a viable alternative to amputation in many cases of advanced sarcoma. The authors examined their experience with microvascular reconstruction of upper extremity defects after sarcoma resection, focusing on oncologic and functional outcomes. A retrospective analysis yielded 17 patients who underwent 18 free flap procedures and met the inclusion criteria. Most patients (71 percent, n = 12) had recurrent sarcoma at presentation to the authors' institution. Malignant fibrous histiocytoma was the most common pathologic subtype (n = 6). High-grade tumors were present in 94 percent of patients (n = 16). The free flap survival rate was 100 percent. The rectus abdominis flap was the most common free flap used (39 percent; n = 7). Local recurrence occurred in nine flaps (50 percent), and five patients ultimately required amputations. Six patients (35 percent) had distant recurrence. The mean Enneking score for limb function was 73 percent of the maximum (21.9 of 30). The 5-year disease-specific survival rate was 61.3 percent. In select patients with advanced upper extremity sarcoma undergoing limb salvage, microvascular flap reconstruction can provide reliable, safe coverage with reasonable preservation of function.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号