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Reconstruction of the Cervical Trachea Using a Prefabricated Corticoperiosteal Flap From the Femur
31
Citations
18
References
2009
Year
Severe Cervical FistulaSurgeryAnatomyOrthopaedic SurgeryRegenerative MedicineApplied AnatomySoft Tissue SurgerySpinal Cord InjuryCervical TracheaPrefabricated Corticoperiosteal FlapLarynxReconstructive SurgeryThoracic SurgeryCervical Tracheal FistulaCraniofacial SurgerySoft Tissue ReconstructionMedicinePlastic SurgeryCervical Spine
We treated a severe cervical fistula with a defect of tracheal cartilage using prefabrication of a corticoperiosteal flap combined with a cutaneous flap.The patient was a 16-year-old male with a cervical tracheal fistula that developed after a tracheostomy. Almost all the circumference of the trachea just below the cricoid cartilage up to the 4th tracheal cartilage had been lost.The reconstruction was performed in 2 series of operations as follows; repair of tracheal framework using a prefabricated corticoperiosteal flap, which was harvested from the femur and composed of a saphenous flap, and then complete closure using a local hinge flap and a free auricular cartilage graft. A free corticoperiosteal flap composed of a saphenous flap was transferred to the site just lateral to the defect. The corticoperiosteal flap, which has a flat shape, was bent in a reverse U-shaped semitubular fashion and the mucosal grafts were used to cover its inner surface. Two months later, the prefabricated corticoperiosteal flap and the saphenous flap were transposed leaving a part of the fistula as a tracheostoma. The remaining tracheostoma was closed secondarily. A satisfactory and stable result was obtained over an 8-year follow-up period.We believe that the procedure demonstrated here should be considered as a choice for the stable reconstruction of a cervical trachea.
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