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Başlık: Double reverse-flow island flaps for two adjacent finger tissue defect
Yazarlar: Uludağ Üniversitesi/Tıp Fakültesi/Ortopedi ve Tramvatoloji Anabilim Dalı.
0000-0003-3133-206X
Kaleli, Tufan
Ersözlü, Salim
Öztürk, Çaǧatay
S-6686-2019
AAB-6136-2022
6603422875
8869531800
8230555600
Anahtar kelimeler: Orthopedics
Surgery
Island flap
Reverse-flow flap
Neurosensitive flap
Finger tissue defect
Fingertip tissue loss
Digital artery
Thenar flap
Volar flap
Reconstruction
Injuries
Hand
Tip
Yayın Tarihi: Nis-2004
Yayıncı: Springer
Atıf: Kaleli, T. vd. (2004). “Double reverse-flow island flaps for two adjacent finger tissue defect”. Archives of Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery, 124(3), 157-160.
Özet: Introduction. Soft-tissue reconstruction of fingertip injuries remains a challenge for hand surgery. Tissue loss of multiple digits is a serious problem for hand surgeons. Surgical possibilities include regional, distant and local flaps. In this study, five patients presented with tissue loss of two adjacent fingers and were treated by double reverse-flow island flaps. Materials and methods. The surgical technique is an application of the reverse-flow homodigital island flap for two adjacent finger tissue defects. Instead of one flap, double island flaps are applied to two adjacent finger tissue defects. The flaps are raised from the lateral or medial palmar surface of the proximal phalanx level. Anastomoses between the radial and ulnar digital arteries at the distal interphalangeal joint level are preserved. Results. Three of the patients had tissue defects at the fingertip. In these cases, digital nerve anastomosis with the counter lateral digital nerve made the flaps sensitive. In two patients, the tissue defect was on the dorsum of the middle phalanx level. In these cases, the flaps were non-sensitive. Nneither infection nor flap failure was seen in the patients. Sensitive function was satisfactory in fingertip applications. Conclusion. The reverse-flow homodigital island flap is a commonly used surgical technique for tissue defects in the fingers. The double reverse-flow island flaps involve the application of this technique for two adjacent fingers. The important point in the surgical technique is that the vascular supply of the two flaps should originate from the same common palmar digital artery. This technique offers a possibility to repair the defects of two adjacent fingers.
URI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00402-003-0621-x
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00402-003-0621-x
http://hdl.handle.net/11452/25933
ISSN: 0936-8051
Koleksiyonlarda Görünür:Scopus
Web of Science

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