• Plast. Reconstr. Surg. · Mar 2003

    Tissue oxygenation and perfusion in inferior pedicle reduction mammaplasty by near-infrared reflection spectroscopy and color-coded duplex sonography.

    • Oliver Scheufler and Reimer Andresen.
    • Department of Plastic, Reconstructive and Hand Surgery, Markus Hospital, Academic Teaching Hospital of the Johann Wolfgang Goethe University, Wilhelm-Epstein-Strasse 2, 60431 Frankfurt-Main, Germany. oliver.scheufler@t-online.de
    • Plast. Reconstr. Surg. 2003 Mar 1; 111 (3): 1131-46.

    AbstractNear-infrared reflection spectroscopy has been used in various experimental and clinical settings to investigate tissue perfusion and oxygenation noninvasively. Its application in plastic surgery has only recently been reported. The current study used near-infrared reflection spectroscopy to monitor cutaneous microcirculation in breast skin flaps after inferior pedicle reduction mammaplasty. Thirty patients underwent bilateral reduction mammaplasty by a modified Robbins technique. Near-infrared reflection spectroscopy measurements were performed preoperatively and postoperatively at several defined positions of the breast. The reflection spectroscopy system was capable of detecting absolute values of total hemoglobin in milligrams per milliliter of tissue and tissue hemoglobin oxygen saturation in percent. Color-coded duplex sonography was used to visualize nutrient vessels of the inferior dermoglandular pedicle and to measure systolic peak flow in the arteries supplying the nipple-areola complex. Reflection spectroscopy values were examined for changes during the postoperative course. Reflection spectroscopy and duplex sonography values were analyzed for differences between patients with normal and compromised skin flap perfusion and wound healing, which was assessed clinically and by ultrasound. Preoperative reflection spectroscopy values demonstrated local, regional, and interindividual variations. Postoperatively, characteristic changes of tissue hemoglobin oxygen saturation and total hemoglobin were observed in all patients during the 2-week follow-up. Reflection spectroscopy values differed significantly between breast and nipple-areola skin. Tissue hemoglobin oxygen saturation was significantly lower, and total hemoglobin significantly higher, in patients with impaired wound healing compared with patients having normal wound healing. However, systolic peak flow in arteries of the inferior dermoglandular pedicle did not reveal differences between patients with impaired or normal wound healing of the nipple-areola complex. Near-infrared reflection spectroscopy allows the detection of hemoglobin content and oxygenation in skin flaps. Changes in tissue hemoglobin oxygen saturation and total hemoglobin reflect hemodynamic changes in skin flaps during normal and pathological wound healing. Because of considerable intraindividual and interindividual variations, trend values seem to be superior to single measurements. Although in this study, near-infrared reflection spectroscopy was capable of distinguishing between normal and impaired perfusion in skin flaps in a clinical model, its future implication may be the early detection of vascular compromise in free flaps.

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