| Literature DB >> 35549724 |
Hong-Xiang Zhou1, Liang He2, Dong Yin2, Yang Niu2, Zhe Jin2, Jun-Jie Li3, Qian-Kun Wang3, Tao Zhou2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Complex lower limb reconstruction due to severe trauma remains a challenge for reconstructive surgeons. Here, we introduce a modified donor blood flow-preserved cross-leg anterolateral thigh flap procedure and evaluate its clinical efficacy.Entities:
Keywords: Cross-leg anterolateral thigh flap; Flow-through; Free skin wrapping of the vascular pedicle; Microanastomosis
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35549724 PMCID: PMC9097098 DOI: 10.1186/s13018-022-03155-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Orthop Surg Res ISSN: 1749-799X Impact factor: 2.359
The demographic and surgical details of the patients
| Case | Sex | Age | Injury type | Injury location | Soft tissue defect (cm2), fracture status | Artery injury | Comorbidities | Flap type | Flap area (cm2) | Complica-tion | Second procedure |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | F | 55 | Traffic accident | Crus (R) | 18 × 15, Gustilo IIIC | PA, aTA and pTA | Hypertension | Single | 22 × 17 | / | Ilizarov |
| 2 | M | 55 | Stubborn ulcer | Crus (R) | 24 × 14 | aTA and pTA | / | Single | 27 × 16 | / | / |
| 3 | M | 33 | Traffic accident | Knee and Crus (L) | 27 × 13, Gustilo IIIC | PA, aTA and pTA | / | Single | 30 × 16 | / | Ilizarov |
| 4 | M | 29 | Traffic accident | Crus (R) | 22 × 11, Gustilo IIIC | PA, aTA and pTA | / | Bilobed | 25 × 12 | / | Ilizarov |
| 5 | M | 24 | Degloving injury | Crus and foot (L) | 22 × 16 (entire planta) | aTA and pTA | / | Single | 24 × 19 | / | / |
| 6 | M | 10 | Traffic accident | Crus (R) | 22 × 15, Gustilo IIIC | PA, aTA and pTA | / | Single | 24 × 18 | / | Ilizarov |
| 7 | M | 26 | Stubborn ulcer | Medial malleolus (L) | 14 × 8 | pTA | / | Bilobed | 17 × 8 | / | / |
| 8 | M | 20 | Traffic accident | Crus (L) | 17 × 10, Gustilo IIIB | PA and aTA | / | Single | 19 × 12 | / | Ilizarov |
| 9 | F | 18 | Traffic accident | Crus (R) | 20 × 14, Gustilo IIIC | PA, aTA and pTA | / | Single | 23 × 17.5 | Local lysis | debridementand Ilizarov |
| 10 | M | 60 | Traffic accident | Crus (R) | 20 × 12, Gustilo IIIB | aTA and pTA | / | Single | 24 × 15 | / | Ilizarov |
| 11 | M | 48 | Traffic accident | Dorsum pedis (L) | 21 × 18 | aTA and DPA | Hypertension | Single | 24 × 21 | / | / |
| 12 | M | 64 | Traffic accident | crus (L) | 12 × 8, Gustilo IIIB | aTA and pTA | Diabetes | Single | 14 × 10 | / | Ilizarov |
| 13 | M | 23 | Traffic accident | Crus (L) | 15 × 10, Gustilo IIIB | aTA and pTA | / | Bilobed | 22 × 9 | / | Ilizarov |
| 14 | M | 38 | Traffic accident | Crus (L) | 26 × 13, Gustilo IIIC | PA, aTA and pTA | / | Single | 30 × 15 | / | Ilizarov |
| 15 | F | 42 | Traffic accident | Crus (L) | 17 × 11, Gustilo IIIB | aTA and pTA | / | Single | 19 × 14 | Local lysis | debridement and Ilizarov |
| 16 | M | 37 | Traffic accident | Crus (R) | 18 × 10, Gustilo IIIC | PA, aTA and pTA | / | Single | 21 × 12 | / | Ilizarov |
| 17 | M | 21 | Traffic accident | Crus and dorsum pedis (L) | 15 × 9, Gustilo IIIB | aTA, pTA and DPA | / | Single | 17 × 11 | / | Ilizarov |
| 18 | M | 44 | Stubborn ulcer | crus (L) | 15 × 8 | aTA | / | Single | 17 × 10 | / | / |
| 19 | F | 46 | Stubborn ulcer | Medial malleolus (R) | 12 × 6 | pTA | / | Single | 14 × 7.5 | / | / |
| 20 | M | 60 | Stubborn ulcer | Crus (L) | 17 × 12 | PA and pTA | hypertension | Single | 20 × 14 | / | / |
| 21 | M | 22 | Traffic accident | Crus (R) | 22 × 12, Gustilo IIIC | PA, aTA and pTA | / | Bilobed | 26 × 13 | / | Ilizarov |
| 22 | F | 46 | Traffic accident | Crus (R) | 12 × 10, Gustilo IIIB | aTA and pTA | hypertension | Single | 15 × 13 | / | Ilizarov |
| M (77%) | 10–64 | Traffic accident (73%) | Crus (86%), L (55%) | 12–27 × 6–18 | Two or more (86%) | Single (82%) | 14–30 × 7.5–21 | Local lysis (9%) | Ilizarov (68%) |
M male, F female, PA peroneal artery, aTA anterior tibial artery, pTA posterior tibial artery, DPA dorsalis pedis artery, Ilizarov Ilizarov technique, patients were listed by admission time
Fig. 1a, b Illustration of the modified recipient blood flow-preserved cross-leg anterolateral thigh flap procedure
Fig. 2Case 20, a 60-year-old man. a A persistent ulcer in the left crus for 5 years. b Preoperative CTA showed that only the anterior tibial artery was unobstructed in the left crus. c An anterolateral thigh flap was harvested. d The defect size was 17 × 12 cm2 after thorough debridement. e Modified cross-leg flow-through flap transplantation was performed. f, g A meshed split-thickness skin was prepared and used to wrap the vascular pedicle. h Four days after flap procedure. i, j Twenty months after the operation
Fig. 3Case 7, a 26-year-old man. a A persistent ulcer in the left medial malleolus for 4 years. b A bilobed flap was prepared. c The arterial pedicle was prepared in a Y-shaped fashion and microanastomosed to the contralateral posterior tibial artery in a flow-through style. Two comitant veins were also microanastomosed. d The modified cross-leg free flap procedure was performed. e The vascular pedicle was separated 4 weeks after flap transplantation. f Seven years after the operation
Fig. 4Case 2, a 55-year-old man. a A persistent ulcer in the right crus for 8 years. b The modified cross-leg free flap procedure was performed. c, d Seven years and ten months after the operation
Fig. 5Case 1, a 55-year-old woman. a Gustilo IIIC trauma in the right crus. b The defect size was 18 × 15 cm2 after thorough debridement. c The modified cross-leg free flap procedure was performed. d Fifteen months after pedicle division. e, f Eight years after the operation