Plastic and reconstructive surgery
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Plast. Reconstr. Surg. · Apr 2002
Clinical TrialThe effectiveness of surgical and nonsurgical interventions in relieving the symptoms of macromastia.
In this report, the authors evaluate the effectiveness of breast reduction in alleviating the symptoms of macromastia by comparing baseline and postoperative health status using a series of well-validated self-report instruments. The study had a prospective design with a surgical intervention group and two control groups: a hypertrophy control group with bra cup sizes D or larger and a normal control group with bra cup sizes less than D. The effectiveness of nonsurgical interventions in relieving the symptoms of macromastia was also evaluated, both in the operative subjects and in the control groups. ⋯ Breast hypertrophy has a significant impact on women's health status and quality of life as measured by validated and widely used self-report instruments including the SF-36, MPQ, and EuroQol. Pain is a significant symptom in this disease, and both pain and overall health status are markedly improved by breast reduction. In this population, conservative measures such as weight loss, physical therapy, special brassieres, and medications did not provide effective permanent relief of symptoms.
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Plast. Reconstr. Surg. · Apr 2002
Early and late effects of ischemic preconditioning on microcirculation of skeletal muscle flaps.
The present study was designed to investigate the early and late effects of ischemic preconditioning on muscle flap perfusion and reperfusion-induced skeletal muscle damage. Thirty-six Sprague-Dawley rats were divided into six experimental groups of six animals each. The cremaster muscle flap model and the intravital microscopy system were used to observe microcirculatory changes associated with ischemia-reperfusion injury and ischemic preconditioning. ⋯ Ischemic preconditioning of the skeletal muscle flap has both an early and a late protective effect against reperfusion injury. Ischemic preconditioning at the early interval significantly improves muscle flow hemodynamics of the flap and attenuates leukocyte-mediated reperfusion injury. After 24 hours of reperfusion, however, ischemic preconditioning failed to improve the flow hemodynamics of the flap, yet it still protected the skeletal muscle flap from leukocyte-mediated reperfusion injury.