Integrated plastic surgery residency training is highly competitive, with the number of interview invitations correlating with academic performance and, to a lesser extent, research. Applicant feedback from this survey can be used to improve the application and interview process.
Liposuction of the flanks in concert with abdominoplasty does not appear to increase the risk of seroma formation. Patients who are overweight or obese present a statistically significantly higher risk for developing seromas postoperatively than patients of normal weight.
As the technique of autologous fat grafting is being refined and perfected, its clinical applications are expanding. The use of autologous fat grafting for primary breast augmentation is controversial due to a lack of clarity regarding its safety and efficacy. Most notably, concerns about interference with the detection of breast cancer have been raised, but these have not been clearly addressed in the literature. To help surgeons gain further insight, the authors conducted a systematic review of the literature, carefully comparing technique, clinical outcome, radiologic impact, and complications in all available data on this subject. Although an optimal method of autologous fat grafting for primary breast augmentation is yet to be standardized, further strong evidence-based studies are necessary to confirm the findings of this approach.
Successful management of a patient's wound at or distal to the knee includes accurate site assessment, meticulous debridement, planning, and execution of a reasonable operative procedure. Outlining a reconstructive plan requires consideration of alternatives from basic to most complex, then selection of the simplest technique likely to achieve wound closure with minimal donor-site morbidity. Healing by secondary intention, with or without vacuum-assisted closure, demands few surgical resources. A skin graft may close a well-vascularized wound. A local skin, fasciocutaneus, or muscle flap can provide vascularized tissue to an otherwise ischemic area. A plastic surgeon may use free tissue transfer in the more difficult anatomic regions, particularly for defects of the distal one-third of the lower leg. Other issues demand consideration when treating a patient with a lower extremity wound. Anesthetic options range from none in the case of secondary intention healing, through prolonged general anesthesia in the circumstance of free tissue transfer. Early recognition of a complication makes successful treatment of that problem more rapid and more likely to be successful. Accurate CPT coding ensures appropriate reimbursement for the reconstructive surgeon and fairness to the payer. Finally, some wounds are so extensive and patients so ill from related or unrelated pathologic processes that attempts at reconstruction are ill advised. These patients are better served by early amputation and prompt rehabilitation.
A cadaver and clinical study was performed to determine the value of transantral endoscopy in diagnosis and treatment of orbital floor fractures. Six fresh cadaver heads were dissected using a 30 degree, 4-mm endoscope through a 1 cm2 antrotomy. In the cadaver, the orbital floor and the course of the infraorbital nerve were easily identified. The infraorbital nerve serves as a reference point for evaluation of fracture size; three zones of the floor are described that are oriented relative to the infraorbital nerve. In the clinical study, nine patients with orbital floor fracture initially underwent endoscopy at the time of fracture repair: three patients had comminuted zygomatico-orbital fractures, five had monofragmented tetrapod fractures, and one had an isolated orbital blowout fracture. Endoscopic dissection of the orbital fractures revealed seven fractures with an area > 2 cm2 and two fractures with an area of < 2 cm2. The isolated orbital floor blowout fracture had entrapped periorbital tissue, which was completely reduced endoscopically. A separate patient with a < 2 cm2 displaced fracture also had stable endoscopic reduction. In the remaining seven patients, the endoscopic technique assisted with the floor reconstruction by identifying the precise fracture configuration as well as identifying the stable posterior ledge of the orbital floor fracture. There have been no complications in any of our patients to date. We conclude: (1) Transantral orbital floor exploration allows precise determination of orbital floor fracture size, location, and the presence of entrapped periorbita. The information obtained through endoscopic techniques may be used to select patients who would not benefit from lid approaches to the orbital floor and may possibly eliminate nontherapeutic exploration. (2) Transantral endoscopic orbital floor exploration assists the reduction of complex orbital floor fractures and allows precise identification of the posterior shelf for implant placement. (3) Transantral endoscopic techniques can completely reduce entrapped periorbital tissue caught in a trapdoor type of fracture.
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