Publication | Closed Access
Emergency Free Tissue Transfer for Severe Upper Extremity Injuries
80
Citations
14
References
1995
Year
Limb ReconstructionLower Limb TraumaUpper ExtremityFlap FailureSurgeryInjury PreventionOrthopaedic SurgeryFlap PhysiologyEmergency Free FlapOperative TreatmentOrthopaedicsFree Flap FailureSurgical SuturingMaxillofacial SurgeryHealth SciencesHand SurgeryLimb RestorationMicrosurgical Nerve RepairHand TraumaLower Extremity WoundWound HealingMedicinePlastic SurgeryEmergency Medicine
29 patients with severe upper extremity injury were treated with 27 emergency free flap and three emergency toe-to-hand transfers, after radical débridement and primary reconstruction of all injured structures. There was no flap failure, and no infections or wound-healing complication were seen. Follow-up ranged from 3 months to 6.6 years with a mean of 3.2 years. 19 patients returned to work (14 to their original jobs), three were retired and another seven had no employment before injury. Operation time ranged from 2 hours 45 minutes to 18 hours 20 minutes with an average of 7 hours 45 minutes, depending upon the size of the defect and mechanism of injury. Long-term follow-up revealed successful functional and aesthetic results, decreased morbidity and invalidity, and reduced rates of free flap failure, post-operative infection, secondary operative procedures, hospital stay and medical expense.
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