Breast cancer chest wall recurrence is often treated with chemotherapy, radical surgery, and radiation. Extensive chest wall resection requires soft-tissue reconstruction with tissue that provides chest wall stability and durability for additional radiation. Local and regional muscle and musculocutaneous flaps are often used for reconstruction. Free flaps, such as the transverse rectus abdominis musculocutaneous flap, are used for large defects, although donor site morbidity can result. The free deep inferior epigastric perforator (DIEP) flap provides coverage for large defects and may have less donor site morbidity. We describe the use of the free DIEP flap to reconstruct large chest wall defects (mean, 501 cm2 defects) after the resection of recurrent breast cancer in two patients. One patient had 2% flap loss. No donor site morbidity occurred. The free DIEP flap is a durable and reliable flap that provided immediate and complete coverage of these large chest wall defects with no donor site morbidity and did not delay the administration of adjuvant therapy.
Ethanol (EtOH) blunts the respiratory and metabolic compensation during hemorrhage, resulting in a more severe lactic acidemia. We hypothesized that lactated Ringer's (LR) resuscitation may exacerbate this lactic acidemia. Male guinea pigs were implanted with arterial and venous catheters. Two days after catheter placement, conscious animals were injected intraperitoneally with 1 g/kg EtOH, 0.3 g/kg EtOH, or an equal volume of water 30 min before hemorrhage (60% of estimated blood volume). After 30 min of hemorrhagic shock, animals were resuscitated with isotonic saline (S) or LR at 1 mL/min (three times shed blood volume). Mean arterial blood pressure (MABP) was not affected by pretreatment with either dose of EtOH, but was significantly decreased by hemorrhage in all groups. Both S and LR resuscitation slightly increased MABP, but neither restored it to prehemorrhage values. Blood lactate levels increased in all groups during hemorrhage and remained elevated for 3 h in animals pretreated with 1 g/kg EtOH. In the group pretreated with 0.3 g/kg EtOH, pH decreased during shock but returned to prehemorrhage levels during the resuscitation period. Resuscitation with S returned pH to prehemorrhage values in animals pretreated with 1.0 g/kg EtOH. Resuscitation with LR did not exacerbate, but did prolong, the lactic acidemia after shock in animals pretreated with 1.0 g/kg EtOH. Administration of additional lactate during intoxication and hypovolemia for hemodynamic stabilization before blood transfusion may exacerbate a metabolic stress.
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