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Intraoperative physiologic blood flow studies in the TRAM flap.
Authors:N R Harris  M S Webb  J W May
Affiliation:Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston 02114.
Abstract:An intraoperative study was done to establish the functional and quantitative properties of the blood supply to the TRAM flap through the assessment and manipulation of blood flow through the deep epigastric arterial system. Seventeen patients undergoing unilateral postmastectomy breast reconstruction with lower transverse rectus abdominis myocutaneous (TRAM) flaps were studied. The study is divided into two parts: (1) ultrasonic measurement of blood flow in the deep inferior epigastric artery (DIEA), and (2) direct measurement of blood pressure in the deep epigastric arterial system, after division of the deep inferior epigastric artery. With occlusion of the superior epigastric artery at the level of the upper edge of the skin flap, 71 percent of the patients had a decrease in the blood flow through the deep inferior epigastric artery, with an average decrease of 23 percent. This implies that the area of watershed perfusion in the lower TRAM flap is superior to the umbilicus, and therefore, survival of all lower TRAM flap tissues requires reversal in the normal direction of arterial flow to the flap. The blood pressure in the proximal stump of the deep inferior epigastric arterial system averaged 46 percent of the mean systemic blood pressure. Occlusion of the medial and lateral thirds of the isolated rectus muscle decreased the mean arterial blood pressure in the flap an average of 19 percent in 80 percent of the individuals studied. These data support the technique of harvesting the entire rectus muscle, avoiding muscle-splitting maneuvers that may compromise axial blood flow.
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