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Flap (surgery)

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Flap surgery
Engraving by John Eric Erichsen depicting flap surgery used to cover an amputation stump
ICD-9-CM86.7

Flap surgery is a technique in plastic and reconstructive surgery where tissue with an intact blood supply is lifted from a donor site and moved to a recipient site. Flaps are distinct from grafts, which do not have an intact blood supply and relies on the growth of new blood vessels. Flaps are done to fill a defect such as a wound resulting from injury or surgery when the remaining tissue is unable to support a graft, wound contraction is to be avoided or to rebuild more complex anatomic structures like breasts or jaws.[1][2]

Uses

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Flap surgery is a technique essential to plastic and reconstructive surgery. A flap is defined as tissue that can be moved to another site and has its own blood supply. This is in comparison to a skin graft which does not have its own blood supply and relies on vascularization from the recipient site.[2] Flaps have many uses in wound healing and are used when wounds are large, complex, or need tissue and bulk for successful closure.[2]

Anatomy

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Flaps can contain many different combination of layers of tissue, from skin to bone (see § Classification). The main goal of a flap is to maintain blood flow to tissue to maintain survival, and understanding the anatomy in flap design is key to a successful flap surgery.[2]

The distribution of the blood vessels in the skin of the sole of the foot. The dermis is referred to as corium.

Skin anatomy

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Flaps may include skin in their construction. Skin is important for many reasons, but namely its role in thermoregulation, immune function, and blood supply aid in flap survival.[2] The skin can be divided into three main layers: the epidermis, dermis, and subcutaneous tissue. Blood is mainly supplied to the skin by two networks of blood vessels. The deep network lies between the dermis and the subcutaneous tissue, while the shallow network lies within the papillary layer of the dermis.[3] The epidermis is supplied by diffusion from this shallow network and both networks are supplied by collaterals, and by perforating arteries that bring blood from deeper layers either between muscles (septocutaneous perforators) or through muscles (musculocutaneous perforators).[2]

This robust and redundant blood supply is important in flap surgery,[2] because flaps are cut off from other blood vessels when it is raised and removed from its surrounding native tissue.[2] The remaining blood supply must then keep the tissue alive until additional blood supply can be formed through angiogenesis.[4]

Angiosome

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The angiosome is a concept first coined by Ian Taylor in 1987.[5] It is a three-dimensional region of tissue that is supplied by a single artery and can include skin, soft tissue, and bone.[5][6] Adjacent angiosomes are connected by narrower choke vessels, and multiple angiosomes can be supplied by a single artery. Knowledge of these supply arteries and their associated angiosomes is useful in planning the location, size, and shape of a flap.[4]

Classification

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Flaps can be fundamentally classified by their mechanism of movement, the types of tissues present, or by their blood supply.[2] The surgeon generally chooses the least complex type that will achieve the desired effect via a concept known as the reconstructive ladder.[7][8]

Mechanism of movement

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Local flaps
Advancement flap
Rotation flap
Transposition flap
  • Local flaps are created by freeing a layer of tissue and then stretching the freed layer to fill a defect. This is the least complex type of flap and includes advancement flaps, rotation flaps, and transposition flaps, in order from least to most complex. With an advancement flap, incisions are extended out parallel from the wound, creating a rectangle with one edge remaining intact. This rectangle is freed from the deeper tissues and then stretched (or advanced) forward to cover the wound. The flap is disconnected from the body except for the uncut edge which contains the blood supply which feeds in horizontally. A rotation flap is similar except instead of being stretched in a straight line, the flap is stretched in an arc. The more complex transposition flap involves rotating an adjacent piece of tissue, resulting in the creation of a new defect that must then be closed.[4]
  • Regional or interpolation flaps are not immediately adjacent to the defect. Instead, the freed tissue "island" is moved over or underneath normal tissue to reach the defect to be filled, with the blood supply still connected to the donor site via a pedicle.[9] The pedicle can be removed after a new blood supply has formed. Examples: pectoralis major myocutaneous flap and deltopectoral flap for head and neck defects, and latissimus dorsi flap and traverse rectus abdominal muscle (TRAM) flap for breast reconstruction.[4]
  • Distant flaps are used when the donor site is far from the defect. These are the most complex class of flap. Direct or tubed flaps involve having the flap connected to both the donor and recipient sites simultaneously, forming a bridge. This allows blood to be supplied by the donor site while a new blood supply from the recipient site is formed. Once this happens, the bridge can be disconnected from the donor site if necessary, completing the transfer.[10] A free flap has the blood supply cut and then reattached microsurgically to a new blood supply at the recipient site.[11][12]

Tissue type

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Flaps can be classified by the content of the tissue within them.

  • Fasciocutaneous flaps contain subcutaneous tissue and deep fascia, resulting in a more robust blood supply and ability to fill a larger defect. The Cormack and Lamberty classification is used for the vascular supply of faciocutaneous flaps.[13] Examples: temporoparietal and anterolateral thigh fascocutaneous flap, lateral fasciocutaneous flap, posterior fasciocutaneous flap.[2]
Breast reconstruction using the latissimus dorsi muscle and an implant. This is an example of a pedicled musculocutaneous flap.
  • Bone flaps contain bone and are used when structural support is needed such as in jaw reconstruction. Example: fibula flap.[2][4][14]
  • Omental flaps can be used in chest wall defects, and intestinal flaps can be used to reconstruct tubular structures like the esophagus.[2]

Vascular supply

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Classification based on blood supply to the flap:

  • Axial flaps are supplied by a named artery and vein. This allows for a larger area to be freed from surrounding and underlying tissue, leaving only a small pedicle containing the vessels.[2] Reverse-flow flaps are a type of axial flap in which the supply artery is cut on one end and blood is supplied by backwards flow from the other direction. Random flaps are simpler and have no named blood supply; they are supplied by the subdermal plexus.[3][4]
  • Pedicled flaps remain attached to the donor site via a pedicle that contains the blood supply, in contrast to a free flap, where the vessels are cut and anastomosed to another blood supply.[1][2]

Contraindications

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Anyone who is unstable for surgery should not undergo flap surgery. As with most surgeries, people who are sicker may have more difficulties with wound healing, which include individuals with comorbidities such as diabetes, smoking, immunosuppression, and vascular disease.[15][16]

Risks or complications

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The risks of flap surgery include infection, wound breakdown, fluid accumulation, bleeding, damage to nearby structures, and scarring.[10] The most notable risk in this procedure is flap death, where the flap loses blood supply. The loss of blood can be due to many reasons, but is commonly due to tension on the vascular supply and insufficient blood flow to the end segments of the flap.[10] This can sometimes be fixed with another surgery or using additional methods of healing in the reconstructive ladder.[17]

Recovery

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As with healing of any wound, healing of a flap maintains the same process of wound healing. There are four stages to wound healing: hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling, all of which can take up to a year to complete.[18][2]

Following flap surgery, the biggest risk in recovery is flap death. Flap failure is an uncommon occurrence but does happen. The reported flap failure rate in free flaps is less than 5%.[19] The most commonly cause is by venous insufficiency consisting of 54% of all causes.[19] Venous insufficiency is commonly caused by a venous thrombus within the first 2 days following surgery.[19][18] After the immediate postoperative risk, the flap will continue to heal adhering to the stages of normal wound healing and will take over 3 months for an incision to be at 80% tensile strength compared to normal tissue.[18]

History

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Walter Yeo, before (left) and after (right) skin flap surgery performed by Harold Gillies in 1917.

Skin flaps are an essential part of a surgeon's toolbox in plastic surgery. It is part of the reconstructive ladder.[17] The first known reports of surgical flaps originated in 600 BC in India by Sushruta where the tilemakers' caste would reconstruct noses using regional flaps due to the practice of nose amputations as a form of legal punishment.[20][17] The next description of flap surgery comes from Celsus, an ancient Roman who described the advancement of skin flaps from 25 BC to 50 AD.[20][17] In the 15th century, Gaspare Tagliacozzi, an Italian surgeon, helped develop the "Italian method" for nasal reconstruction, a delayed pedicle skin graft, where the skin from the arm would be attached to the nose for many months to create the reconstruction, first printed in the 1597 book De Curtorum Chirurgia per Insitionem.[21] The Italian method was rediscovered in 1800 by German surgeon Carl Ferdinand von Graefe.[22] Major advancements in modern plastic surgery are mostly attributed to Harold Gillies, who pioneered facial reconstruction during World War I using pedicled tube flaps on patients like Walter Yeo, and the development of the walking-stalk skin flap by Gilles' cousin Archibald McIndoe in 1930.[20][23]

Advancements continued in flap surgery. With the introduction of the operating microscope, microvascular surgery advancements allowed for the anastomosis of blood vessels.[12] This led to the ability of free tissue transfers, and in 1958 Bernard Seidenberg transferred a part of the jejunum to the esophagus to remove a cancer.[12][24] Modern advancements in flap surgeries have continued since this time and are now commonly used in many procedures.[12]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Song DH, Henry G, Reid RR, Wu LC, Wirth GA, Dorafshar AH (2007). "Chapter 2: Grafts and Flaps". Plastic Surgery: Essentials for Students. Plastic Surgery Education Foundation.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Chung KC (2020). Grabb and Smith's plastic surgery (8th ed.). Philadelphia. ISBN 978-1-4963-8824-7. OCLC 1091585260.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  3. ^ a b Clark JM, Wang TD (November 2001). "Local flaps in scar revision". Facial Plast Surg. 17 (4): 295–308. doi:10.1055/s-2001-18831. PMID 11735064. S2CID 42728956.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Guyuron B, Eriksson E, Persing JA (2009). "Chapter 8: Flaps". Plastic Surgery: Indications and Practice. Vol. 1. Saunders Elsevier. ISBN 978-1-4160-4081-1.
  5. ^ a b Taylor GI, Palmer JH (March 1987). "The vascular territories (angiosomes) of the body: experimental study and clinical applications". Br J Plast Surg. 40 (2): 113–41. doi:10.1016/0007-1226(87)90185-8. PMID 3567445.
  6. ^ Houseman ND, Taylor GI, Pan WR (June 2000). "The angiosomes of the head and neck: anatomic study and clinical applications". Plast Reconstr Surg. 105 (7): 2287–313. doi:10.1097/00006534-200006000-00001. PMID 10845282. S2CID 34422340.
  7. ^ Turner AJ, Parkhouse N (July 2006). "Revisiting the reconstructive ladder". Plast Reconstr Surg. 118 (1): 267–8. doi:10.1097/01.prs.0000222224.03137.d5. PMID 16816714.
  8. ^ Boyce DE, Shokrollahi K (March 2006). "Reconstructive surgery". BMJ. 332 (7543): 710–2. doi:10.1136/bmj.332.7543.710. PMC 1410906. PMID 16565127.
  9. ^ Mellette JR, Ho DQ (January 2005). "Interpolation flaps". Dermatol Clin. 23 (1): 87–112, vi. doi:10.1016/j.det.2004.08.010. PMID 15620622.
  10. ^ a b c Tschoi M, Hoy EA, Granick MS (April 2005). "Skin flaps". Clin Plast Surg. 32 (2): 261–73. doi:10.1016/j.cps.2004.11.005. PMID 15814122.
  11. ^ Guyuron B, Eriksson E, Persing JA (2009). "Chapter 9: Microsurgery and Free Flaps". Plastic Surgery: Indications and Practice. Vol. 1. Saunders Elsevier. ISBN 978-1-4160-4081-1.
  12. ^ a b c d Wolff KD, Hölzle F (2011). Raising of microvascular flaps: a systematic approach (2nd ed.). Berlin: Springer. ISBN 978-3-642-13831-7. OCLC 733542624.
  13. ^ Cormack GC, Lamberty BG (January 1984). "A classification of fascio-cutaneous flaps according to their patterns of vascularisation". Br J Plast Surg. 37 (1): 80–7. doi:10.1016/0007-1226(84)90049-3. PMID 6692066.
  14. ^ Cormack GC, Lamberty BGH (1986). The arterial anatomy of skin flaps. London: Churchill Livingstone. OCLC 12808179.
  15. ^ Carrau, Ricardo L.; Vescan, Allan D.; Snyderman, Carl H.; Kassam, Amin B. (2008-01-01). Myers, Eugene N.; Carrau, Ricardo L.; Eibling, David E.; Ferguson, Berrylin J. (eds.). Chapter 105 - Reconstruction after Skull Base Surgery. Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders. pp. 1061–1068. ISBN 978-1-4160-2445-3. Retrieved 2022-10-30. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  16. ^ Saint-Cyr M, Wong C, Buchel EW, Colohan S, Pederson WC (December 2012). "Free tissue transfers and replantation". Plast Reconstr Surg. 130 (6): 858e–878e. doi:10.1097/PRS.0b013e31826da2b7. PMID 23190838. S2CID 22788028.
  17. ^ a b c d Gottlieb LJ, Krieger LM (June 1994). "From the reconstructive ladder to the reconstructive elevator". Plast Reconstr Surg. 93 (7): 1503–4. doi:10.1097/00006534-199406000-00027. PMID 7661898.
  18. ^ a b c Buchanan PJ, Kung TA, Cederna PS (September 2016). "Evidence-Based Medicine: Wound Closure". Plast Reconstr Surg. 138 (3 Suppl): 257S–270S. doi:10.1097/PRS.0000000000002775. PMID 27556770. S2CID 5865301.
  19. ^ a b c Kroll SS, Schusterman MA, Reece GP, Miller MJ, Evans GR, Robb GL, Baldwin BJ (December 1996). "Timing of pedicle thrombosis and flap loss after free-tissue transfer". Plast Reconstr Surg. 98 (7): 1230–3. doi:10.1097/00006534-199612000-00017. PMID 8942909. S2CID 20380107.
  20. ^ a b c Chambers JA, Ray PD (November 2009). "Achieving growth and excellence in medicine: the case history of armed conflict and modern reconstructive surgery". Ann Plast Surg. 63 (5): 473–8. doi:10.1097/SAP.0b013e3181bc327a. PMID 20431512.
  21. ^ Tomba P, Viganò A, Ruggieri P, Gasbarrini A (2014). "Gaspare Tagliacozzi, pioneer of plastic surgery and the spread of his technique throughout Europe in "De Curtorum Chirurgia per Insitionem"". Eur Rev Med Pharmacol Sci. 18 (4): 445–50. PMID 24610608.
  22. ^ Erovic BM (2015). Manual of Head and Neck Reconstruction Using Regional and Free Flaps. Springer Vienna. ISBN 978-3-7091-1172-7. OCLC 974391518.
  23. ^ Gillies HD (2019). Plastic Surgery of the Face Based on Selected Cases of War Injuries of the Face, Including Burns; With Original Illustrations. Forgotten Books. ISBN 978-0-259-73591-5. OCLC 1152260318.
  24. ^ Seidenberg B, Rosenak SS, Hurwitt ES, Som ML (February 1959). "Immediate reconstruction of the cervical esophagus by a revascularized isolated jejunal segment". Ann Surg. 149 (2): 162–71. doi:10.1097/00000658-195902000-00002. PMC 1450976. PMID 13627972.
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