Adams-Oliver syndrome (AOS) is a rare congenital disorder characterised by a wide variety of clinical expression ranging from the occurrence of aplasia cutis congenita (ACC), transverse limb defects, and cutis marmorata telangiectica to extensive lethal anomalies. In this article, we present the conservative and surgical management of a male newborn infant diagnosed with AOS. Surgical treatment included wound management, the removal of protruding brain, and treatment of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leakage. After spontaneous reepithelization of the wounds, conservative treatment was chosen instead of reconstruction with an occipital flap; this was continued until the total healing of the dermal defect after eight months, during which the patient was continuously treated with antibiotics. At 17 months, the child was in good physical condition with a three-month development delay in comparison with infants of his age and no evidence of neurological deficit.
Neuropathic pain caused by a neuroma can have a significant effect on daily life. Current surgical treatments include simple neuroma excision and proximal nerve stump relocation (into a muscle, vein, or bone). We describe a patient who presented with neuropathic pain, restricted to the dorsum of the right hand, and numbness of the dorsum of the radial half of the middle finger. The patient is a right-handed architect and due to the trauma could no longer shake hands for fear of pain. Her Tinel’s test was strongly positive. In 2015, she was diagnosed with a neuroma-in-continuity of the third digital nerve originating from the superficial branch of the radial nerve. At the time she was treated with an on-site Naropin injection and hand rehabilitation therapy, which ultimately alleviated the pain. Three years later she presented with pain progression whereupon we treated her exclusively with AFT. The patient was followed up for 12 weeks after the operation; the pain completely disappeared and the patient could shake hands again. After one year, she was still pain-free. AFT is a new technique for the treatment of persistent neuropathic pain and numbness in the hand caused by blunt-trauma neuroma. Autologous fat grafting is a safe, effective, minimally invasive, and innovative therapeutic approach for the management of painful neuromas.
A verrucous carcinoma is a rare, low-grade variant of a well-differentiated squamous cell carcinoma (SCC). It frequently occurs in Caucasian males aged 50 to 60. The tumour is locally destructive, grows into muscle, nerves and bones, but rarely metastasizes. Here we report a patient with verrucous carcinoma on the right calcaneus with the uncommon symptom of a haemorrhagic plaque at the centre and also an exophytic component. A 52-year-old man presented with a 10-year-old, progressive, painful, pruritic, exophytic growing, hyperkeratotic and haemorrhagic plaque of 5.2 x 3.5cm on the right calcaneus. The lesion emerged after extensive burns after blast trauma as a child. Excisional biopsy with 2mm margin in combination with clinical presentation favoured a verrucous carcinoma. The pathology report showed that the tumour was not excised radically; therefore, re-excision with 5mm margin was required and was performed two months later. The wound was closed with a medial plantar artery perforator (MPAP) flap. The donor site was closed with a full-thickness skin graft (FTSG) from the medial side of the right upper leg and was covered by a tie-over bandage. Verrucous carcinoma is a rare tumour and can be adequately surgically treated by excision with clear margins. In this case, the verrucous carcinoma of the right calcaneus was excised and reconstructed with an MPAP flap with decent results, despite a challenging postoperative course.
Background: Segmental bone defects pose a major, unsolved clinical challenge and may be the result of high-energy trauma, infection, and tumour resection or revision surgery. Several options exist to reconstruct, including Ilizarov bone transport, Masquelet technique, cylindrical mesh technique, allografts, and vascularized bone autografts. We present a patient with a delayed union of the tibia with concomitant chronic osteomyelitis treated with anterolateral thigh (ALT) flap and double-barrelled vascularized fibula graft.Case presentation: A 60-year-old male with a chronic pretibial wound with underlying osteomyelitis of the right leg presented himself at the emergency department and was admitted to the surgical ward. He had complex chronic osteomyelitis of a tibial non-union after an earlier right crural fracture (a previous work-related accident). He was treated with an ALT flap and double-barrelled vascularized fibula graft, which was complicated with an additional fracture and breakage of osteosynthesis material. Conclusion:Segmental bone defects pose a major, unsolved clinical challenge in orthopaedic, traumasurgical, and plastic surgical practice. Concomitant infections and fractures can be part of the postoperative course. Patients with complex segmental bone defects need to be treated by a multidisciplinary team including at least an (orthopaedic) trauma surgeon, a plastic surgeon, and an infectiologist.
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