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      Preoperative anemia predicts thrombosis and free flap failure in microvascular reconstruction.

      Annals of Plastic Surgery
      Anemia, blood, complications, diagnosis, Biological Markers, Female, Free Tissue Flaps, blood supply, pathology, transplantation, Graft Survival, Hematocrit, Hemoglobins, metabolism, Humans, Logistic Models, Male, Microvessels, surgery, Middle Aged, Necrosis, etiology, Postoperative Complications, Preoperative Period, Reconstructive Surgical Procedures, methods, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Thrombosis

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          Abstract

          Patients undergoing microvascular reconstruction are often anemic from a combination of iatrogenic hemodilution and acute blood losses. No major clinical study describes the impact of preoperative anemia on free flap morbidity. The plastic surgery service at a high-volume academic center performed 156 free flaps among 147 patients from December 2005 to December 2010. One hundred thirty-two had a preoperative hemoglobin (Hb) or hematocrit (Hct), with mean values of 11.8±2.4 g/dL and 35.2%±7.0%, respectively. The overall failure rate was 9% (12/132), primarily from vascular thrombosis (6/12). Through logistic regression analysis, Hb and Hct were significant predictors of flap failure (P<0.005) and vascular thrombosis (P<0.05). Fisher exact test revealed a significant increase in failure risk at Hct level less than 30% (Hb<10 g/dL) (relative risk, 4.76, P=0.006), and probit analysis demonstrated an exposure-response relationship to decreased Hct level (P<0.005). These findings support that preoperative anemia could significantly impact free flap morbidity.

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