A prospective study of preoperative computed tomographic angiography for head and neck reconstruction with anterolateral thigh flaps
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posted on 2024-03-12, 14:37 authored by Patrick B. Garvey, Jesse C. Selber, John E. Madewell, Luc Bidaut, Lei Feng, Peirong Yu<p>Background: During anterolateral thigh flap harvest, inadequate perforators may necessitate modification of the flap design, exploration of the contralateral thigh, or additional flap harvest. Computed tomographic angiography may facilitate perforator mapping and optimize flap design. The authors performed this pilot study to determine the predictive power of computed tomographic angiography in anterolateral thigh flap planning and execution. Methods: Sixteen consecutive computed tomographic angiography-mapped anterolateral thigh flaps for head and neck reconstruction were studied. Perforator location, origin, caliber, and course were compared between computed tomographic angiography and intraoperative findings. The relationship of patient characteristics, imaging studies, and intraoperative factors to flap design and surgical outcomes was analyzed. Results: Among the 16 anterolateral thigh flaps, 40 of 54 perforators identified intraoperatively were visible on computed tomographic angiography, resulting in 74 percent sensitivity. Intraoperative perforator location averaged 0.35 cm from the computed tomographic angiography-predicted location. The overall ability of computed tomographic angiography to predict perforator size was 67.5 percent. Its overall accuracy in predicting whether a perforator took a septocutaneous or intramuscular course before perforating the deep fascia was 77.5 percent. Preoperative angiography resulted in surgeons modifying the operative plan in 37 percent of cases and 57 percent of double-island flap cases. All flaps were elevated successfully and survived. Conclusions: Computed tomographic angiography identified larger perforators better than smaller ones and proximal perforators better than distal ones. It accurately predicted the location and origin of visible perforators and less accurately predicted the size and course of visible perforators. Most importantly, the information it provided influenced surgeons to modify their reconstructive strategy, resulting in a higher level of recipient-site specificity. Copyright © 2011 by the American Society of Plastic Surgeons.</p>
History
School affiliated with
- School of Computer Science (Research Outputs)
Publication Title
Plastic and Reconstructive SurgeryVolume
127Issue
4Pages/Article Number
1505-1514Publisher
Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins for American Society of Plastic SurgeonsExternal DOI
ISSN
0032-1052eISSN
1529-4242Date Submitted
2016-10-30Date Accepted
2016-10-30Date of First Publication
2016-10-30Date of Final Publication
2016-10-30ePrints ID
24127Usage metrics
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