Salvage Procedures for Facial Reanimation With Neurovascular Flaps When Previous Surgeries Failed: Is Homolateral Vessel or Nerve Depletion a Contraindication?

Annals of plastic surgery 2022 Vol.89(2) p. 196-200

Ibarra G, Lasso JM

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Abstract

[BACKGROUND] Facial paralysis reconstruction can be difficult in extensive defects after complex facial or cranial base tumor resection and radiotherapy or when primary smile reanimation attempt has failed. The surgical challenge is more complicated when defects are associated with recipient vessels or nerves depletion. This scenario has not been well described in the literature, and the present article will address the alternatives that plastic surgeons may use in these circumstances.

[METHODS] Seventy-five patients operated in the Hospital Gregorio Marañon between 2008 and 2020, for dynamic reconstruction of facial paralysis, were retrospectively evaluated, collecting data about previous facial nerve surgeries, radiotherapy, chemotherapy, recipient nerve for motor restoration and vessels used for free flaps, type of neurovascular free flap (NVFF), and functional score before and after the facial reanimation surgery. Patients presenting recipient vessel and/or nerve depletion after several facial surgeries requiring a variation from the common NVFF surgical protocol were included in this study.

[RESULTS] Six cases (8%) with facial paralysis and absent recipient homolateral vessels or nerves after severe cranial base surgery, parotid malignancies, or schwannoma surgery were included. Two patients had an immediate functional reconstruction during the oncologic resection surgery, and 4 patients had a delayed reconstruction. Three patients had previous reconstruction with free flaps, and the vascular pedicles of previous flaps were used for the new NVFF. In the other 3 cases, interposition vein grafts to the contralateral recipient vessels were required to perform NVFF. Masseteric nerve in 4 cases, hypoglossal nerve and posterior branch of the deep temporal nerve in 1 case each, were used as recipient nerves. House-Brackmann score improved in all patients after surgery.

[CONCLUSIONS] Neurovascular free flap can be successfully performed to restore facial motion after depletion of homolateral recipient vessels or nerves after previous facial or cranial base surgeries. In these cases, interposition vascular grafts or the pedicle of previous flaps are essential to provide vascularization as well as an optimal orientation of flaps, to reach recipient nerves in a 1-step procedure.

추출된 의학 개체 (NER)

유형영어 표현한국어 / 풀이UMLS CUI출처등장
시술 free flap 피판재건술 dict 2
해부 nerves scispacy 1
해부 neurovascular scispacy 1
해부 vascular pedicles scispacy 1
해부 flaps scispacy 1
해부 homolateral recipient vessels scispacy 1
해부 vascular grafts scispacy 1
합병증 cranial base tumor scispacy 1
합병증 facial nerve scispacy 1
합병증 cranial scispacy 1
합병증 hypoglossal nerve scispacy 1
합병증 flap scispacy 1
합병증 cranial base scispacy 1
합병증 flaps scispacy 1
약물 [BACKGROUND] Facial paralysis reconstruction scispacy 1
약물 [CONCLUSIONS] Neurovascular free scispacy 1
질환 paralysis C0522224
Paralysed
scispacy 1
질환 cranial base tumor scispacy 1
질환 primary smile reanimation scispacy 1
질환 parotid malignancies scispacy 1
질환 schwannoma C0027809
Neurilemmoma
scispacy 1
질환 NVFF → neurovascular free flap scispacy 1
기타 Neurovascular Flaps scispacy 1
기타 Vessel scispacy 1
기타 recipient nerve scispacy 1
기타 vessels scispacy 1
기타 homolateral vessels scispacy 1
기타 Masseteric nerve in scispacy 1
기타 posterior branch scispacy 1
기타 recipient nerves scispacy 1

MeSH Terms

Contraindications; Facial Nerve; Facial Paralysis; Free Tissue Flaps; Humans; Plastic Surgery Procedures; Retrospective Studies

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