| Literature DB >> 12545113 |
Kwang Seog Kim1, Eui Sik Kim, Dae Young Kim, Sam Yong Lee, Bek Hyun Cho.
Abstract
Resurfacing after a total degloving injury to the hand is one of the most difficult management problems in hand surgery. Although there are many methods of managing this type of injury that preserve functions and lessen deformities, none provides a satisfactory solution to this problem. The authors resurfaced a totally degloved hand using extremely thin and broad perforator-based cutaneous free flaps, and the donor defects were covered with split-thickness skin grafts. The postoperative course was uneventful, the flaps survived completely, and the grafts took without loss. Several minor operations, including interdigitation, defatting, and the formation of palmar and digital creases, were required to obtain the final appearance and function of the hand. Eighteen months after the initial operation, the patient could pick up a bean with a pair of chopsticks. Sensation was satisfactory in the palm 20 months after the initial operation, as evidenced by 10 mm of static two-point discrimination. To reconstruct a total and complete skin defect of the hand, the authors recommend that thin perforator-based cutaneous free flaps be an initial consideration.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2003 PMID: 12545113 DOI: 10.1097/00000637-200301000-00013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Plast Surg ISSN: 0148-7043 Impact factor: 1.539