The sacral region is one of the most frequent sites of pressure sore development, and local flaps in the gluteal region are usually preferred when surgical closure is needed. The authors used the gluteal fasciocutaneous rotation-advancement flap with V-Y closure to manage sacral pressure sores in 15 patients. The design was a combination of the classic rotation and V-Y advancement flap patterns. When the wound was closed, the tension at the distal end of the rotation flap was relieved by flap advancement and the combined rotation-advancement action was supported laterally with V-Y closure. A wide skin pedicle was preserved at the inferomedial part of the flap. This pedicle augmented the blood supply to the flap skin and kept the surgical incision small, thus helping to reduce the risk of fecal contamination and associated wound-healing problems. This flap can also be converted to any design of fasciocutaneous or musculocutaneous V-Y advancement flap, should such a change be required. The largest defects that were closed with a unilateral rotation-advancement flap and bilateral rotation-advancement flaps were 12 and 18 cm in diameter, respectively. In 1.5 to 35 months of follow-up, none of the patients developed wound dehiscence or flap necrosis requiring repeated surgery. This technique is simple, can be performed quickly, has minimal associated morbidity, and yields a good outcome.
Reconstruction of partial, marginal defects of the ear has been a challenge. The ascending helix free flap based on superficial temporal vessels has been described and used solely to repair nose defects. We used reversed pedicle helical free flap for the repair of a major loss of the upper one-third of the opposite auricle. The method permits the transfer of tissue of the same quality with satisfactory cosmetic result. The equalization of the ears in dimension was accomplished with minimal donor-site deformity.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.