Plastic and reconstructive surgery
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Plast. Reconstr. Surg. · Aug 2001
Case ReportsReconstruction of burn scar of the upper extremities with artificial skin.
The management of upper-extremity burn contractures is a major challenge for plastic surgeons. After approval by the Food and Drug Administration, artificial skin (Integra) has been available in Taiwan since 1997. From January of 1997 to July of 1999, the authors applied artificial skin to 13 severely burned patients for the reconstruction of their upper extremities, resulting in an increased range of motion in the upper-extremity joints and improved skin quality. ⋯ According to this evaluation of Oriental skin turgor, normal pigmentation was restored about 6 months after the resurfacing procedure. For patients with severe burns in whom there is insufficient available skin for a full-thickness skin graft or another appropriate flap for scar revision, Integra is an alternative. The two major concerns in dealing with artificial skin are (1) a 10- to 14-day waiting period for maturation of the neo-dermis, necessitating a two-stage operation, and (2) prevention of infection with antibiotics and meticulous wound care.
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Plast. Reconstr. Surg. · Aug 2001
Plasticity of the endocranial base in nonsyndromic craniosynostosis.
Limited in vivo data exist on the dysmorphology of the cranial base in nonsyndromic craniosynostosis. Few studies have documented the effect of calvarial surgery for synostosis on endocranial morphology. Previous work has suggested that the dysmorphology of the endocranial base is diagnostically specific for metopic, sagittal, and unicoronal sutures. ⋯ With regard to the individual sutures, the results were as follows (data are presented as preoperative accuracy versus postoperative accuracy): metopic, 76 percent versus 44 percent; sagittal, 58 percent versus 34 percent; unicoronal, 100 percent versus 79 percent; and normal, 83 percent versus 72 percent. Although 36 of 306 total images per group (12 percent) actually represented normal patients, the observers called 72 of 306 normal (24 percent) in the preoperative set versus 110 of 306 normal (36 percent) in the postoperative set. In conclusion, (1) the endocranial dysmorphology of nonsyndromic craniosynostosis is recognizably specific to the affected suture; (2) calvarial surgery for nonsyndromic craniosynostosis normalizes the endocranial base qualitatively with regard to the diminished ability of raters to identify the primary pathology; and (3) the documented postoperative changes in endocranial base morphology after calvarial surgery for nonsyndromic craniosynostosis in infancy indicates that a major component of that dysmorphology is a secondary deformity rather than a primary malformation.
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Plast. Reconstr. Surg. · Aug 2001
An in vitro mouse model of cleft palate: defining a critical intershelf distance necessary for palatal clefting.
It is unclear whether cleft palate formation is attributable to intrinsic biomolecular defects in the embryonic elevating palatal shelves or to an inability of the shelves to overcome a mechanical obstruction (such as the tongue in Pierre Robin sequence) to normal fusion. Regardless of the specific mechanism, presumably embryonic palatal shelves are ultimately unable to bridge a critical distance and remain unapproximated, resulting in a clefting defect at birth. We propose to use a palate organ culture system to determine the critical distance beyond which embryonic palatal shelves fail to fuse (i.e., the minimal critical intershelf distance). ⋯ Culturing palatal shelves at intershelf distances of 0.48 mm or greater results in nonfusion or clefting in vitro. This model will allow us to study biomolecular characteristics of unfused or cleft palatal shelves in comparison with fused shelves. Furthermore, we plan to study the efficacy of grafting with exogenous embryonic mesenchyme or candidate factors to overcome clefting in vitro as a first step toward future in utero treatment strategies.
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Plast. Reconstr. Surg. · Jul 2001
ReviewA comprehensive review of epinephrine in the finger: to do or not to do.
The prohibition against the use of local anesthetics with epinephrine for digital blocks or infiltration is an established surgical tradition. The present article provides a comprehensive review of all reported digital necrotic and ischemic complications with epinephrine in the digits in an effort to understand whether the current prohibition is based on documented reports. A comprehensive review of articles showing the successful use of local anesthetic with epinephrine in the digits is presented. ⋯ Multiple studies involving thousands of patients support the premise that the use of lidocaine with epinephrine is safe in the digits. An extensive literature review failed to provide consistent evidence that our current preparations of local anesthesia with epinephrine cause digital necrosis, although not all complications are necessarily reported. However, as with all techniques, caution is necessary to balance the risks of this technique with the dangers of mechanical tourniquets and upper extremity block anesthesia.