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      Reverse sural fasciocutaneous flap with a cutaneous pedicle to cover distal lower limb soft tissue defects: experience of 109 clinical cases

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          Abstract

          Background

          Soft tissue defects over the mid- and distal third tibia, heel, dorsum and plantar aspect of the foot and over the medial, lateral and posterior aspect of the ankle are a common scenario in clinical orthopaedic practice. In this article, we describe the utility of the reverse sural fasciocutaneous flap with a cutaneous pedicle in 109 clinical cases with distal lower limb soft tissue defects.

          Materials and methods

          A total of 109 patients were operated on for moderate (5–15 cm) and large (more than 15 cm) soft tissue defects at various sites along the lower limb including foot, heel and sole with the reverse sural fasciocutaneous flap. The defects were secondary to trauma (61 cases), diabetic ulcers (12 cases), post-traumatic scar contracture (8 cases), venous ulcer (4 cases), wound dehiscence (10 cases), leprotic non-healing ulcer (1 case), post-infective wound (1 case), radiation-induced ulcer following radiotherapy for synovial cell sarcoma (1 case), post-fibromatosis excision (1 case), post-dermatofibrosarcoma excision (1 case), post-heel melanoma excision (1 case) and actinomycosis foot (1 case). Patients were assessed for flap uptake and healing of defects.

          Results

          Among the 102 cases analysed, 81 were male and 21 female with an average age of 32.7 years. The average size of the flaps was 148.10 ± 59.54 cm 2. The flap healed uneventfully in 89.21 % of patients. Edge necrosis occurred in 9 cases. Donor site regrafting was required in 7 patients.

          Conclusion

          The reverse sural fasciocutaneous flap with a cutaneous pedicle is a quick, versatile, easy and safe soft tissue defect coverage technique to cover most of the soft tissue defects of the lower limb in common orthopaedic practice and does not require any microvascular repair, though it may be cosmetically unappealing in a few cases.

          Level of evidence

          IV (Case series)

          Related collections

          Most cited references22

          • Record: found
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          Frontal plagiocephaly: synostotic, compensational, or deformational.

          Plagiocephaly is a term commonly used to describe congenital forehead asymmetry. Sixty patients with frontal plagiocephaly were evaluated retrospectively and separated into three types: synostotic (N = 24), compensational (N = 3), and deformational (N = 33). Categorization of frontal plagiocephaly as synostotic or deformational was reliably made by physical examination, focusing on the supraorbital rims, nasal root, ears, and malar eminences. Other anatomic parameters useful in the differential diagnosis included chin point, palpebral fissures, and facial height. This study documented that birth histories were similar for synostotic and deformational frontal plagiocephalic infants. However, other deformational anomalies were more common in deformational frontal plagiocephalic infants, whereas malformations had an equal incidence in deformational and synostotic frontal plagiocephalic infants. Torticollis was an associated finding in 64 percent of infants with deformational frontal plagiocephaly; almost all were ipsilateral. In contrast, head tilt, usually to the contralateral side, was noted in 14 percent of patients with synostotic frontal plagiocephaly. Female preponderance was noted in both synostotic (79 percent) and deformational (76 percent) frontal plagiocephaly. Left-sided involvement was seen in 73 percent of patients with deformational frontal plagiocephaly and in 46 percent of patients with synostotic frontal plagiocephaly. Premature pelvic descent, in the left occipital anterior position, may account for the high incidence of left-sided deformational plagiocephaly and ipsilateral torticollis.
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            A new distally based fasciocutaneous flap of the leg.

            A distally based flap on the medial side of the lower leg is described. In ten cadaver dissections two perforating arteries from the posterior tibial artery were a constant finding and a flap has been designed based on these. It has been used successfully in four patients.
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              Hemisoleus and reversed hemisoleus flaps.

              G S Tobin (1985)
              This paper reports an anatomic study of the soleus muscle and clinical applications of the findings derived from the study. Soleus neurovascular anatomy was studied in 86 limbs by dissection and specimen angiography. A consistently present bipenniform muscle morphology was found with medial and lateral subunits that had independent distal neurovascular supplies. This anatomic feature allows surgically splitting the muscle for transfer of one-half the muscle as a flap (hemisoleus muscle flaps). A series of 33 patients using both medial and lateral hemisoleus flaps in both proximally and distally based transfer is analyzed and illustrative examples are presented. The primary value of this technique is the ability to retain one-half the innervated soleus muscle in situ to preserve foot plantar flexion power in ambulatory patients. In addition, hemisoleus flaps have an extended arc of rotation as compared with that of conventional soleus muscle flaps.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                drhemant.patankar@gmail.com
                Journal
                J Orthop Traumatol
                J Orthop Traumatol
                Journal of Orthopaedics and Traumatology : Official Journal of the Italian Society of Orthopaedics and Traumatology
                Springer Milan (Milan )
                1590-9921
                1590-9999
                24 June 2014
                24 June 2014
                September 2014
                : 15
                : 3
                : 225-229
                Affiliations
                Patankar’s Hand and Limb Reconstruction Clinic, 204, Garodia Market, Plot no. 8-A, D.K. Sandu Marg, Chembur, Mumbai, 400071 Maharashtra India
                Article
                304
                10.1007/s10195-014-0304-0
                4182622
                24957508
                77af162a-203a-40de-b9e8-abdd4d14452d
                © The Author(s) 2014

                Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits any use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and the source are credited.

                History
                : 17 August 2013
                : 12 May 2014
                Categories
                Original Article
                Custom metadata
                © The Author(s) 2014

                Orthopedics
                distal,defects,flaps,sural
                Orthopedics
                distal, defects, flaps, sural

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