The keystone design perforator island flap in reconstructive surgery

被引:250
作者
Behan, F [1 ]
机构
[1] Western Hosp, Reconstruct Plast Surg Unit, Footscray & Melanoma Unit, Peter MacCallum Canc Inst, Melbourne, Vic, Australia
关键词
aesthetic results; Keystone Design Perforator Island Flaps; melanoma; pain;
D O I
10.1046/j.1445-2197.2003.02638.x
中图分类号
R61 [外科手术学];
学科分类号
摘要
Background: A surgical technique for closing skin defects following skin cancer (particularly melanoma) removal is described in the present paper. Its use is illustrated in five patients. The technique has been used in 300 cases over the past 7 years and is suitable for all areas of the body from scalp to foot. We have coined the term Keystone Design Perforator Island Flap (KDPIF) because of its curvilinear shaped trapezoidal design borrowed from architectural terminology. It is essentially elliptical in shape with its long axis adjacent to the long axis of the defect. The flap is based on randomly located vascular perforators. The wound is closed directly, the mid-line area is the line of maximum tension and by V-Y advancement of each end of the flap, the 'islanded' flap fills the defect. This allows the secondary defect on the opposite side to be closed, exploiting the mobility of the adjacent surrounding tissue. The importance of blunt dissection is emphasized in raising these perforator island flaps as it preserves the vascular integrity of the musculocutaneous and fasciocutaneous perforators together with venous and neural connections. The keystone flap minimizes the need for skin grafting in the majority of cases and produces excellent aesthetic results. Four types of flaps are described: Type I (direct closure), Type II (with or without grafting), Type III (employs a double island flap technique), and Type IV (involves rotation and advancement with or without grafting). The patient is almost pain free in the postoperative phase. Early mobilization is possible, allowing this technique to be used in short stay patients. Results: In a series of 300 patients with flaps situated over the extremities, trunk and facial region, primary wound healing was achieved in 99.6% with one out of 300 developing partial necrosis of the flap. Conclusions: The technique described in the present article offers a simple and effective method of wound closure in situations that would otherwise have required complex flap closure or skin grafting particularly for melanoma.
引用
收藏
页码:112 / 120
页数:9
相关论文
共 16 条
[1]   Ring avulsion injuries managed with homodigital and heterodigital Venous Island Conduit (VIC) flaps [J].
Behan, FC ;
Cavallo, AV ;
Terrill, P .
JOURNAL OF HAND SURGERY-BRITISH AND EUROPEAN VOLUME, 1998, 23B (04) :465-471
[2]   Island flaps including the bezier type in the treatment of malignant melanoma [J].
Behan, FC ;
Terrill, PJ ;
Breidahl, A ;
Cavallo, A ;
Ashton, M ;
Bennett, T ;
Moss, C ;
Archer, B .
AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF SURGERY, 1995, 65 (12) :870-880
[3]   THE FASCIOCUTANEOUS ISLAND FLAP - AN EXTENSION OF THE ANGIOTOME CONCEPT [J].
BEHAN, FC .
AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF SURGERY, 1992, 62 (11) :874-886
[4]  
BEHAN FC, 1975, T 6 INT C PLAST REC
[5]   The cutaneous microcirculation [J].
Braverman, IM .
JOURNAL OF INVESTIGATIVE DERMATOLOGY SYMPOSIUM PROCEEDINGS, 2000, 5 (01) :3-9
[6]  
FitzGibbon G M, 1968, Br J Plast Surg, V21, P226, DOI 10.1016/S0007-1226(68)80028-1
[7]  
LITTLER JW, 1956, J BONE JOINT SURG AM, V38, P917
[8]   Active hair growth (Anagen) is associated with angiogenesis [J].
Mecklenburg, L ;
Tobin, DJ ;
Müller-Röver, S ;
Handjiski, B ;
Wendt, G ;
Peters, EMJ ;
Pohl, S ;
Moll, I ;
Paus, R .
JOURNAL OF INVESTIGATIVE DERMATOLOGY, 2000, 114 (05) :909-916
[9]   EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES ON ISLAND FLAPS .1. SURVIVING LENGTH [J].
MILTON, SH .
PLASTIC AND RECONSTRUCTIVE SURGERY, 1971, 48 (06) :574-&
[10]   Accompanying arteries of the cutaneous veins and cutaneous nerves in the extremities: Anatomical study and a concept of the venoadipofascial and/or neuroadipofascial pedicled fasciocutaneous flap [J].
Nakajima, H ;
Imanishi, N ;
Fukuzumi, S ;
Minabe, T ;
Aiso, S ;
Fujino, T .
PLASTIC AND RECONSTRUCTIVE SURGERY, 1998, 102 (03) :779-791