Microsurgery
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Case Reports
Repeated upper limb salvage in a case of severe traumatic soft-tissue and brachial artery defect.
We present the case of a 9-year-old male patient who suffered a gunshot injury to the right arm. The patient arrived in shock, his right arm severely traumatized, with soft-tissue loss involving the anterior surface and both sides of the right arm. The humerus was exposed. ⋯ After another blood transfusion, we performed a second reverse saphenous vein graft. The patient stayed at the hospital for 3 weeks. At follow-up 12 months later, the limb has good function and, except for the presence of a scar and skin graft, is equal in appearance to the left side.
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The potentialities, limitations, and technical pitfalls of the vascularized fibular grafting in infected nonunions of the tibia are outlined on the basis of 14 patients approached anteriorly or posteriorly. An infected nonunion of the tibia together with a large exposed area over the shin of the tibia is better approached anteriorly. The anastomosis is placed in an end-to-end or end-to-side fashion onto the anterior tibial vessels. ⋯ Patients presenting with infected nonunions of the tibia with extensive scarring of the lower extremity, excessively large areas of skin loss, and with questionable patency of the anterior and posterior tibial vessels are not suitable candidates for the free vascularized fibular graft. Although a vein graft could be used between the recipient popliteal and the donor peroneal vessels, its use decreases flow to the graft considerably. These patients are better candidates for the Ilizarov bone transport method with or without free latissimus dorsi transfer.
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Experimental and clinical studies have shown that a vein segment filled with skeletal muscle used to bridge a peripheral nerve defect (muscle-vein-combined graft) leads to good nerve repair. However, the molecular basis of the nerve fiber regeneration process along this type of graft still remains to be elucidated. The aim of this study was to verify the expression of two neurotrophins, nerve growth factor (NGF) and brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), as well as their receptors, trkA and p75, in an early stage of axonal regeneration in muscle-vein-combined grafts. ⋯ Many of these cells reacted for NGF, BDNF, and p75, but not trkA. In control grafts, i.e., immediately after surgery, no immunostaining was detected for any of the antibodies used in this study. These observations suggest that, very early after surgery, the muscle-vein-combined graft offers to growing axons an environment particularly favorable for regeneration, providing us with a possible explanation for the efficacy of this grafting technique for peripheral nerve repair.
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To investigate the protective effects of ligustrazine on renal ischemia-reperfusion injury, the influence of ligustrazine injection on plasma superoxide dismutase (SOD), malondialdehyde (MDA), and endothelin-1 (ET-1), as well as changes of morphology of renal tubules, were studied in rat kidney models with ischemia-reperfusion injury. The results showed that in the group treated with ligustrazine, the plasma SOD level was significantly higher than that of the control group (P < 0.05), but levels of plasma MDA and ET-1 and the pathological grading of injured renal tubules were significantly lower than those in the control group (P < 0.05). These findings suggest that ligustrazine has protective effects against ischemia-reperfusion injury in rat kidneys.