Conventional liposuction-assisted debulking of muscle perforator flaps.

Publication/Presentation Date

7-1-2004

Abstract

Late recontouring of the usual bulky cutaneous flap via conventional liposuction is an accepted practice and usually without fear of tissue necrosis. Muscle perforator flaps, on the other hand, initially depend only on often fragile, minuscule vessels that could readily be traumatized by any form of suction-assisted lipectomy. Single-staged muscle perforator flap debulking was thus performed with some trepidation for 8 flaps in 7 patients. All flaps ultimately remained successful, but in 2 cases obvious tissue ischemia delayed healing. It can only then be assumed that this adjunctive technique places all perforators at jeopardy for injury. Survival of the given flap may then depend solely on neovascularization from the recipient site, and that must be protected to retain pedicle independence, or otherwise flap necrosis would ensue. Thus, the timing of muscle perforator flap debulking could then be critical. Although that averaged 9.1 months (range, 3-15 months) after flap transfer in this series, the observed ischemia occurred at both ends of this spectrum.

Volume

53

Issue

1

First Page

39

Last Page

43

ISSN

0148-7043

PubMedID

15211197

Department(s)

Department of Surgery, Department of Surgery Faculty

Document Type

Article

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