| Literature DB >> 26943408 |
Yui Watanabe1, Tadashi Umehara2, Aya Harada2, Masaya Aoki2, Takuya Tokunaga2, Soichi Suzuki2, Go Kamimura2, Kazuhiro Wakida2, Toshiyuki Nagata2, Tsunayuki Otsuka2, Naoya Yokomakura2, Kota Kariatsumari2, Yoshihiro Nakamura2, Yuko Watanabe3, Masami Sato2.
Abstract
A tracheocutaneous fistula may develop when a tracheostomy orifice epithelializes during a prolonged course of healing or undernutrition. Various techniques for closing such fistulae have been reported. However, a standard procedure has not yet been established. We, herein, present a case involving a 35-year-old woman who developed a tracheocutaneous fistula after tracheostomy. We closed the fistula using two skin flaps to cover the tracheal lumen and skin defect, respectively. The advantage of this technique is that it allows the tracheal lumen to be covered by inversed skin epithelium and ensures that the suture line of the skin does not match up with that of the subcutaneous tissue.Entities:
Keywords: Skin flap; Tracheocutaneous fistula; Tracheostomy
Year: 2015 PMID: 26943408 PMCID: PMC4747946 DOI: 10.1186/s40792-015-0045-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Surg Case Rep ISSN: 2198-7793
Fig. 1Preoperative and operative findings. a Cervical sagittal computed tomography showed a tracheocutaneous fistula. b The skin incision was designed as a box around the fistula and two sequential straight lines. c A single flap was elevated and rotated to cover the skin defect, and the skin was sutured layer by layer
Fig. 2Operative schemes. a Bilateral hinge flaps were created to close the fistula. The flaps were taken from the left and right sides of the tracheal defect, and the superfluous skin of each hinge flap was trimmed. b The hinge flaps were inversed to cover the tracheal lumen with skin epithelium and sutured tightly with the platysma muscle. c A single flap to cover the skin defect was elevated from the lateral aspect of the right hinge flaps. The arrows indicate how the skin flaps were positioned. d The single flap was elevated and rotated to cover the skin defect, and the skin was sutured layer by layer