As a first choice for treating pressure sores, we present our experiences with gluteal perforator flaps and a simplified surgical technique. Twenty-three gluteal perforator flaps were used in 20 patients (13 males, 7 females; aged, 8-68 years) with pressure sores. The pressure sores were sacral in 16 patients, ischial in 2, and trochanteric in 2 patients. During follow-up, recurrence in the same region did not occur. Our simplified operative technique includes finding a suitable perforator with a Doppler probe (it does not matter from which mother artery), outlining the flap, dissecting the perforator with just enough length, and transposing the flap to the defect. The gluteal region has numerous perforators, and there is no need to depend on strict anatomic landmarks to detect perforator vessels or to sacrifice main arteries, as has been the case when raising gluteal perforator flaps.
Median clefts of the lower lip and mandible are rare craniofacial clefts. Couronné in 1819 was the first to describe the condition. The midline cleft of the lower lip was classified by Tessier as a type 30 craniofacial cleft. Recently, the total number of the reported cases had increased to about 66 in the world literature. In addition, 2 more patients are presented here. The first case involves only a small notch in the vermilion; the deformity was treated by Z-plasty. In the second case, a midline incomplete cleft of the lower lip, a sublingual abnormal frenulum, a complete cleft in the mandible, a bifid sternum, a presternal skin tag, and a ventricular septal defect in the heart were present. At operation, Z-plasty of the lingual frenulum released the normal-sized tongue. The lip cleft was corrected by a simple V excision followed by closure in 3 layers. The mandibular segments were "vitalized" with a bone rongeur and immobilized in the predetermined position with an interosseous stainless steel wire. Because the bone fusion was complete, the stainless steel wire was taken out after 3 months so that it would not prevent mandibular development. Our treatment methods and others are discussed.
The reading man flap can be used to reconstruct malar and infraorbital circular defects with good cosmetic results and without creating any tractional forces to the eyelids.
The pedicled deep inferior epigastric perforator (DIEP) flap can be used successfully to reconstruct the lower abdominal, inguinal, and genital regions. This muscle-sparing technique offers many advantages, such as minimal donor-site morbidity, a wide arch of rotation, and more versatile flap design, and provides for easier reconstruction than free flaps. Four pedicled DIEP flap cases are described in this article. The flaps were used to reconstruct lower abdominal defects and groin defects and to perform a penile reconstruction. To the best of our knowledge, ours is the first report in the English literature to describe the use of a pedicled DIEP flap for penile reconstruction. The donor sites were closed directly, and morbidity in all cases was minimal.
We herein report a case of a diabetic 49-year-old woman with anterior chest wall necrotizing fasciitis that caused a retropharyngeal abscess and discuss the literature surrounding necrotizing soft tissue infections of the chest wall. The patient was treated with serial wound debridements, antibiotic therapy, and percutaneous drainage and serial irrigation of the retropharyngeal abscess with a silicone catheter. The resulting defect was grafted with a split thickness skin graft.
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