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The lateral forearm flap as a modification of the lateral arm flap: vascular anatomy and clinical implications
Authors:Tan B K  Lim B H
Institution:Department of Plastic Surgery, Singapore General Hospital.
Abstract:The forearm extension of the lateral arm flap was introduced on the basis of the vascular territory of the posterior radial collateral artery extending beyond the elbow into the forearm. However, there is controversy as to whether the posterior radial collateral artery extends as a single trunk below the elbow or if it terminates more proximally with only a rich vascular plexus extending beyond the elbow. The purpose of this study was to revisit the artery's anatomy in the region of the elbow and to study its distribution in the forearm. Using latex and barium-gelatin injections of the posterior radial collateral artery in ten cadaveric upper limbs, it was observed that terminal branching of the artery occurred 4.5 cm proximal to the lateral epicondyle of the humerus. Distal to the epicondyle, the terminal branches of the posterior radial collateral artery were seen to fan out as finely arborized branches supplying the lateral forearm skin. No single, constant vascular trunk to the forearm skin could be identified. Furthermore, in its distribution toward the periphery, the terminal branches of the posterior radial collateral artery took an increasingly superficial course. Proximal to the epicondyle, the vessels lay deep within the subcutaneous fat, whereas distal to the epicondyle, they were very close to skin. These findings suggest that lateral forearm skin cannot be islanded without risk of vascular disruption and that the distally sited flap should include skin proximal to the epicondyle for safety.
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