Literature DB >> 28489206

Lower extremity reconstruction: epidemiology, management and outcomes of patients of the Federal District North Wing Regional Hospital.

Jefferson Lessa Soares Macedo1,2, Simone Corrêa Rosa1,3, Daniel Lobo Botelho1, Clendes Pereira Dos Santos1, Murilo Neves DE Queiroz2, Tabatha Gonçalves Andrade Castelo Branco Gomes2.   

Abstract

Objective: to evaluate the management of lower limbs complex traumatic injuries by analyzing their characteristics, types, conduct and evolution, with emphasis on surgical treatment.
Methods: we conducted a prospective study of patients treated by Plastic Surgery at a regional hospital of the Federal District during a one-year period. We collected data through serial evaluations and telephone contact records.
Results: we studied 40 patients, with a mean age of 25.6 years, predominantly male (62.5%). The most frequent wounds were of the distal third of the lower limb (37.5%). Bone or tendon exposures occurred in 55% had and there was a 35% rate of exposed lower limb fractures. The treatments employed were skin grafting (57.5%), local fasciocutaneous flap (15%), muscle flap (12.5%), cross-leg fasciocutaneous flap, reverse sural flap (12.5%) and microsurgical flap (2.5%). Short-term evaluation showed that 35 patients had excellent or good results (87.5%), four had a regular result (10%), and one had an unsatisfactory result (2.5%). In the long term, of the 18 patients who answered the questionnaire, ten resumed walking, even with support, in the first three months after surgery (55.6%).
Conclusion: young men involved in motorcycle accidents during leisure time represented the profile of patients with lower limb trauma requiring surgical reconstruction; the distal third of the leg was the most affected region. Grafting was the most used technique for reconstruction and postoperative functional evaluation showed that, despite complex lesions, most patients evolved with a favorable healing process and successful functional evolution.

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Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28489206     DOI: 10.1590/0100-69912017001003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Rev Col Bras Cir        ISSN: 0100-6991


  2 in total

1.  Forecasting the flap: predictors for pediatric lower extremity trauma reconstruction.

Authors:  Kasra N Fallah; Logan A Konty; Brady J Anderson; Alfredo Cepeda; Grigorios A Lamaris; Phuong D Nguyen; Matthew R Greives
Journal:  Arch Plast Surg       Date:  2022-01-15

2.  Repeated reverse sural fasciocutaneous flap is an effective surgical strategy for repairing long segmental soft tissue defects of the tibia.

Authors:  Zelong Cui; Xuemei Zhang; Jiabao Shou; Guoqian Yin
Journal:  J Int Med Res       Date:  2019-09-17       Impact factor: 1.671

  2 in total

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