1. The Proximally Designed Sural Flap Based on the Accompanying Artery of the Lesser Saphenous Vein
- Author
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Pedro Henrique Isoldi Pohl, Thiago Guedes da Motta Mattar, Alvaro Baik Cho, Márcio Aurélio Aita, Walter Yoshinori Fukushima, and Gustavo Mantovani Ruggiero
- Subjects
Adult ,Graft Rejection ,Male ,Microsurgery ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Bone Neoplasms ,Sural nerve ,Sampling Studies ,Surgical Flaps ,Young Adult ,Sural Nerve ,medicine ,Humans ,Flap survival ,Saphenous Vein ,Complication rate ,Tibia ,Child ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Survival rate ,Leg ,Wound Healing ,Lesser saphenous vein ,business.industry ,Graft Survival ,Leg Ulcer ,Soft tissue ,Anatomy ,Middle Aged ,Plastic Surgery Procedures ,Surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Regional Blood Flow ,Tissue and Organ Harvesting ,Female ,business ,Follow-Up Studies ,Leg Injuries ,Artery - Abstract
Most of the literature about the sural flap deals with soft tissue defects at the lower leg and foot based on the classical description of Masquelet et al. Nevertheless, some authors have shown that the lesser saphenous vein and its accompanying artery play an important role in the vascularization of the posterior skin of the leg. This finding allowed a more proximal design of the flap, increasing its arc of rotation. Thirteen cases of distally based sural flaps were performed and divided in two groups according to the level where the flaps were harvested. In group A, the entire flap was outlined distal to the midpoint of the leg, and in group B, the flap was outlined proximal to the midpoint of the leg. In group A, all the soft tissue defects were located at the lower leg and the foot, and in group B, they involved the anterior the tibia. In group A, the complication rate was 33.33% and the flap survival rate was 83.33%. In group B, the complication rate was 42.85% and survival rate was 100%. The proximally designed sural flap can safely reach the anterior aspect of the tibia in its middle and distal thirds.
- Published
- 2010
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