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Issue title: Selected papers of the 38th Conference of the German Society for Clinical Microcirculation and Hemorheology, 21-23 November 2019, Braunschweig, Germany
Guest editors: P. Wiggermann, A. Krüger-Genge and F. Jung
Article type: Research Article
Authors: Schiltz, Daniel | Taeger, Christian D. | Biermann, Niklas | Ranieri, Marco | Klein, Silvan | Prantl, Lukas | Geis, Sebastian*;
Affiliations: Department of Plastic, Reconstructive and Hand Surgery at the University Medical Center Regensburg, Germany
Correspondence: [*] Corresponding author: Sebastian Geis, MD, Department of Plastic, Reconstructive and Hand Surgery, University Medical Center Regensburg, Director: Professor Lukas Prantl, MD, Franz-Josef-Strauß-Allee 11, 93053 Regensburg, Germany. Tel.: +49 941 944 6367; E-mail: sebastian.geis@ukr.de.
Abstract: BACKGROUND:Reconstruction of soft tissue defects with free flaps is a common procedure in plastic and reconstructive surgery. Most postoperative complications occur within the first 48–72 hours after surgery. After postoperative complications, short perfusion restoration times may improve flap survival rates by up to 30–50%. Ratiometric fluorescence imaging is an additional or alternative method of postoperative flap monitoring. OBJECTIVE:To test the efficacy and utility of transepidermal oxygen flux imaging to evaluate postoperative skin oxygenation of free and local flaps in the first 48 hours after surgery. METHODS:The study included 32 patients (aged between 18 and 80 years; mean age 52.9) with a tissue defect covered with a free flap transplant at the Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery of the University Medical Center Regensburg. Postoperative oxygen flux was measured with the ‘VisiSens system’ placed on the vascular pedicle as well as on the peripheral and central part of the flap. RESULTS:Values of oxygen flux were higher in case of flap congestion (0.069±0.012) or flap necrosis (0.155±0.083) than in cases without any complications (0.061±0.006). Flux values of different areas of the same flap showed only minimal differences (central part: 0.065±0.008, peripheral part: 0.070±0.009, vascular pedicle: 0.056±0.004); the level of significance was p = 0.904. CONCLUSION:Imaging transepidermal oxygen flux by ratiometric luminescence seems to be a reliable alternative, indirect method of postoperative flap monitoring with regard to microcirculatory function and flap viability.
Keywords: Postoperative free flap monitoring, microcirculatory function, tissue oxygenation, tissue perfusion, flux imaging, flap monitoring, transcutaneous oxygen measurement
DOI: 10.3233/CH-199225
Journal: Clinical Hemorheology and Microcirculation, vol. 73, no. 1, pp. 113-123, 2019
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