Full-thickness abdominal wall defects continue to be a challenge for the reconstructive surgeon. The most frequently used reconstructive techniques are transfer of a pedicled, local abdominal flap or a distant flap from the thigh region. The purpose of this paper is to present a new approach to full-thickness abdominal wall reconstruction using an innervated free latissimus dorsi musculocutaneous flap. Four patients with large full-thickness abdominal wall defects underwent reconstruction with a free innervated latissimus dorsi muscle flap. In two patients, staged abdominal wall reconstruction was performed. Primary closure was first obtained with a skin graft. During the subsequent definitive reconstruction (with an innervated free latissimus dorsi muscle flap), this skin graft was not excised. Instead, deep dermabrasion of the skin graft was performed, leaving a residual dermal layer. This layer was then covered with a free innervated latissimus dorsi muscle flap. In these two cases, there was no need for the use of a prosthetic mesh. A single stage reconstruction was performed in the other two cases. After abdominal wall sarcoma resection, Prolene mesh was placed and subsequently covered with a free innervated latissimus dorsi muscle flap. There were no free flap failures. The average time of surgery was 4 hours, 50 minutes. The average hospital stay was 14 days. No significant complications occurred except for one donor site seroma. No hernias have occurred postoperatively. The mean follow-up was 21 months. Postoperatively, electromyographic testing was performed regularly in all patients to document reinnervation of the latissimus dorsi muscle flap. With reinnervation and intensive muscle training, the transplanted latissimus dorsi muscle offers enough contractile capacity and strength to adequately replace the function of the missing abdominal wall muscles. In complicated staged reconstructions, dermabrasion of the temporary skin graft allows for the use of a residual dermal layer as a fascia-like substitute to aid in the restoration of structural integrity. The combination of the dermal layer with an innervated free latissimus dorsi muscle provides a strong, vascularized fascial repair as well as an overlying vascularized soft-tissue coverage. In conclusion, adequate functional dynamic reconstruction of full-thickness abdominal wall defects is possible using an innervated free latissimus dorsi muscle flap. The reinnervated latissimus dorsi muscle is suitable for reconstitution of the missing functional and anatomic components of complex abdominal wall defects.
Summary:Concentrations of neopterin, which is produced by human monocytes/macrophages when stimulated by γ-interferon, were measured in urine specimens from 72 patients with lung cancer at diagnosis. Other routine clinical and laboratory variables were concomitantly determined. Neither neopterin nor any other laboratory variable studied showed a significant correlation with clinical indicators of the disease (morphologic type, tumour stage, grading, lymph node status, presence of distant metastases). The cancer patients were followed up for up to 10 years, and the abilities of all variables to predict fatal outcome were assessed. In univariate survival analyses, all clinical indicators except morphologic type (P = 0.86) were significant predictors of survival (P < 0.002), but of all the laboratory variables studied, only neopterin was significantly predictive (P = 0.0013). By multivariate survival analysis, a combination of four variables was found to jointly predict survival: lymph node status (P = 0.003, multivariate model), tumour stage (P = 0.0006), grading (P = 0.0047) and neopterin (P = 0.0047). The data suggest that certain aspects of immune activation may have adverse consequences for the prognosis of patients with lung cancer.
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