Literature DB >> 12621340

The use of full-thickness skin grafts for the skin-abutment interface around bone-anchored hearing aids.

Mary C Snyder1, Gary F Moore, Perry J Johnson.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To review the complication rate encountered with the use of full-thickness skin grafts to establish the skin-abutment interface around bone-anchored hearing aid implants. STUDY
DESIGN: Retrospective chart review.
SETTING: Tertiary referral center. PATIENTS: Fifteen patients who underwent bone-anchored hearing aid placement over a 4-year period. INTERVENTION: Each percutaneous titanium implant and abutment was placed into the temporal bone following the standard Branemark technique. Eight procedures were performed in two stages, and seven were performed as single-stage procedures. In all cases, the skin-abutment interface was established by use of a full-thickness skin graft inset around the implant. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The incidence of complications resulting in skin graft loss, time from implantation to bone-anchored hearing aid use, additional procedures for revision of the interface, and complicating medical factors in the patient population.
RESULTS: Seven patients (46.7%) experienced loss of the full-thickness skin graft around the abutment. Four of these seven had complicating medical factors associated with impaired wound healing: two with diabetes mellitus, one of whom was also a smoker, and two patients who were receiving inhaled steroids for treatment of asthma. Of the seven patients who lost skin grafts, two healed by secondary intention, two underwent repeated full-thickness skin grafting, and three underwent galeal rotation flaps with split-thickness skin grafting, one of which eventually required a scalp flap. No patient experienced loss of the implant.
CONCLUSION: The use of full-thickness skin grafts for establishment of the skin-abutment interface around bone-anchored hearing aid implants is associated with a high rate of graft loss. Although salvage techniques can successfully establish the interface after skin graft failure, alternative methods should be considered, especially in high-risk patients.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12621340     DOI: 10.1097/00129492-200303000-00020

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Otol Neurotol        ISSN: 1531-7129            Impact factor:   2.311


  4 in total

1.  BAHA: Bone-Anchored Hearing Aid.

Authors:  Abdulrahman Hagr
Journal:  Int J Health Sci (Qassim)       Date:  2007-07

2.  Simplified technique without skin flap for the bone-anchored hearing aid (BAHA) implant.

Authors:  R Bovo
Journal:  Acta Otorhinolaryngol Ital       Date:  2008-10       Impact factor: 2.124

3.  Surgical outcome of bone anchored hearing aid (baha) implant surgery: a 10 years experience.

Authors:  A Asma; M A Ubaidah; Siti Salbiah Hasan; W H Wan Fazlina; B Y Lim; L Saim; B S Goh
Journal:  Indian J Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg       Date:  2013-02-02

4.  A Comparison of the Operative Techniques and the Postoperative Complications for Bone-Anchored Hearing Aid Implantation.

Authors:  Mark W Steehler; Sean P Larner; Joshua S Mintz; Matthew K Steehler; Sidney P Lipman; Shane Griffith
Journal:  Int Arch Otorhinolaryngol       Date:  2018-01-18
  4 in total

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