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      Contrast harmonic ultrasound and indocyanine-green fluorescence video angiography for evaluation of dermal and subdermal microcirculation in free parascapular flaps.

      Clinical hemorheology and microcirculation
      Adult, Anastomosis, Surgical, Angiography, instrumentation, methods, Contrast Media, pharmacology, Fluorescent Dyes, Humans, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Indocyanine Green, Microcirculation, pathology, ultrasonography, Microscopy, Video, Middle Aged, Myocardium, Perfusion, Skin, blood supply, Surgical Flaps, Ultrasonics, Ultrasonography

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          Abstract

          Contrast harmonic ultrasound (CHI) with a linear transducer is a new diagnostic approach that allows dynamic and quantitative flow detection of tissue perfusion in microsurgery. The aim of the study was the evaluation of perfusion of the dermal and subdermal layers of microvascular tissue transplants with CHI in comparison to ICG-fluorescence angiography. In a prospective clinical study Indocyanine-Green Fluorescence Video Angiography and Contrast Enhanced High Resolution Ultrasound (5-10 MHz; linear transducer; Logiq 9; GE) were used for evaluation of the microcirculation in 10 transplanted free parascapular flaps. Two regions were analysed, the centre of the flap and the region of the anastomosis. The perfusion patterns of both methods were compared. The perfusion indexes measured by ICG-fluorescence angiography correlated very precisely in all patients with the quantitative perfusion curves of contrast-enhanced US with CHI. Two flaps with slow filling and low dye intensity showed low contrast enhancement in CHI with modified perfusion curves with slow increase. In two cases a reduced perfusion and filling were found. There were no statistical differences between the two diagnostic methods (p>0.01). CHI improves US detections of dermal and subdermal microcirculation in comparison to ICG fluorescence angiography. CHI is a new diagnostic method for postoperative monitoring of free flaps.

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