Literature DB >> 18176208

Donor-site morbidity of ear cartilage autografts.

Robert A Mischkowski1, Catarina Domingos-Hadamitzky, Matthias Siessegger, Max J Zinser, Joachim E Zöller.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The external ear provides a versatile cartilage source for reconstructive procedures, especially for augmentative rhinoplasty. The authors evaluated the short- and long-term morbidity associated with ear cartilage harvest using concha, tragus, and scapha as donor sites.
METHODS: The study included 52 patients in whom a cartilage graft from the external ear was harvested between February of 2001 and June of 2005. Donor-site morbidity was assessed in the early postoperative follow-up period. Twenty-eight patients were examined within a follow-up time of 3 to 168 months. Long-term morbidity assessment included documentation of patients' subjective complaints, clinical examination of the donor site, and anthropometric measurements.
RESULTS: The relevant morbidity factors in the early postoperative period were hematoma formation (6.7 percent) and sensory impairment (3.3 percent). In long-term follow-up, sensory impairment was the most frequent condition objectively assessed and subjectively complained of (12.9 percent). Overall, sensory impairment was confined to concha as the donor site. Anthropometric measurements showed a mean difference in the length of the affected ear compared with the contralateral ear of 1.8 mm, a width difference of 2.5 mm, a difference in tragus/lateral canthus distance of 1.4 mm, and a difference in protrusion angle of 2.4 degrees. Statistically significant differences between values obtained from operated and nonoperated ears could not be detected for every evaluated parameter using the paired t test. Aesthetically relevant complications were rare and their occurrence restricted to single cases.
CONCLUSION: Cartilage graft harvest from the auricle can be considered as a relatively safe procedure with a favorable aesthetic outcome.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18176208     DOI: 10.1097/01.prs.0000293879.46560.4c

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Plast Reconstr Surg        ISSN: 0032-1052            Impact factor:   4.730


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