• Acta chirurgiae plasticae · Jan 2006

    Case Reports

    Reconstruction of facial burn sequelae utilizing tissue expanders with embodiment injection site: case report.

    • A Foustanos and H Zavrides.
    • Plastic Surgery Department, IASO Hospital, Athens, Greece. foustand@otenet.gr
    • Acta Chir Plast. 2006 Jan 1; 48 (3): 103-7.

    AbstractAlthough highly specialized burn centers have significantly reduced mortality rates following extensive total body surface area burns, survivors are often left with grotesque facial disfigurement. Hypertrophic scars and tissue defects are the most common cause of functional and aesthetic problems in the head and neck region. Plastic surgeons use full-thickness or split-thickness skin grafts, pedicled flaps, free flaps, transplantation of bone or cartilage and tissue expansion. The authors present a case of a patient who suffered from third-degree flame burns to the face. Prior skin grafting procedures left him with severe scar deformity of the face. The patient was treated utilizing multiple tissue expansion. Facial animation has retained and facial integrity has been aesthetically restored and, with the use of make-up, it is near normal in social settings at conversational distances. The tissue expansion technique is advantageous in facial reconstruction because it makes it possible to resurface even wider defects with neighboring skin, similar in colour and texture, and superior to skin obtained elsewhere.

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