ABSTRACT
An experimental study was designed to examine whether the blood supply of the muscle
would be maintained by a reverse flow from the random pattern skin flap through the
musculocutaneous perforators. A flap model containing rat rectus abdominis muscle
and randomly based overlying abdominal skin was designed. Sixty rats were divided
into four experimental groups as follows. In group I, scintigraphy and microangiography
were performed in 10 and 6 rats, respectively, immediately after flap elevation. In
group II, scintigraphy and microangiography were performed in 10 and 6 rats, respectively,
2 days after flap elevation. In group III, surviving skin paddle area was evaluated
in 16 rats 7 days after flap elevation. After evaluation of surviving skin paddle
area, the same animals were used for microangiographic (n = 6) and scintigraphic (n
= 10) studies at the same day. In group IV, histopathologic examination was done in
six flap muscles each 2 and 6 weeks after flap elevation (n = 12). The mean percentage
of surviving skin paddle area was 95.6 ± 6.5% on postoperative day 7. Microangiography
showed progressively developed blood flow from the skin to muscle through the musculocutaneous
perforators in groups II and III, respectively. The radioisotope uptake of the operated
muscle was 40.9 ± 12.8% immediately after flap elevation (group I), 58.3 ± 15.6% on
postoperative day 2 (group II), and 70.7 ± 25.6% on postoperative day 7 (group III).
There was a significant difference only between group I and group III (p < 0.05, analysis of variance). Histopathologically prominent atrophy, lipomatoses,
and fibroses were revealed at week 6. The poor circulation and viability outcomes
of the muscle revealed in the study are because of immediately insufficient blood
microcirculation at the distal part of the random pattern skin flap.
KEYWORDS
Random skin flap - reverse blood flow - muscle viability
REFERENCES
1 Cormack G C, Lamberty B G.
The microcirculation . In: Cormack GC, Lamberty BG The Arterial Anatomy of Skin Flaps. 2nd ed. London;
Churchill Livingstone 1994: 15-69
2
Yazar S, Cetinkale O, Senel O et al..
An experimental study of skin flap associated with muscle: Is muscle nourishment possible
through the musculocutaneous perforators?.
Ann Plast Surg.
2000;
45
500-508
3
Restifo R J, Ahmed S S, Isenberg J S et al..
Timing, magnitude, and utility of surgical delay in the TRAM flap: I. Animal studies.
Plast Reconstr Surg.
1997;
99
1211-1216
4
Restifo R J, Ahmed S S, Rosser J et al..
TRAM flap perforator ligation and the delay phenomenon: development of an endoscopic/laparoscopic
delay procedure.
Plast Reconstr Surg.
1998;
101
1503-1511
5
Özgentaş H E, Shenaq S, Spira M.
Development of a TRAM flap model in the rat and study of vascular dominance.
Plast Reconstr Surg.
1994;
94
1012-1017
6
Özgentaş H E, Shenaq S, Spira M.
Study of the delay phenomenon in the rat TRAM flap model.
Plast Reconstr Surg.
1994;
94
1018-1024
7
Kostakoğlu N, Manek S, Green C J.
The development of neovascularisation in flap prefabrication with vascular implantation:
an experimental study.
Br J Plast Surg.
1997;
50
428-434
8
Rees M J, Taylor G I.
A simplified lead oxide cadaver injection technique.
Plast Reconstr Surg.
1986;
77
141-145
9
Boyd J B, Taylor G I, Corlett R.
The vascular territories of the superior epigastric and the deep inferior epigastric
systems.
Plast Reconstr Surg.
1984;
73
1-14
10
Cederna P S, Chang P, Pittet-Cuenod B M et al..
The effect of the delay phenomenon on the vascularity of rabbit abdominal cutaneous
island flaps.
Plast Reconstr Surg.
1997;
99
183-193
11
Sayman H B, Urgancıoglu I.
Muscle perfusion with technetium-MIBI in lower extremity peripheral arterial diseases.
J Nucl Med.
1991;
32
1700-1703
12
Cetinkale O, Demir M, Sayman H B et al..
Effects of allopurinol, ibuprofen and cyclosporin A on local microcirculatory disturbances
due to burn injuries.
Burns.
1997;
23
43-49
13 Mathes S J, Eshima I.
The principles of muscle and musculocutaneous flaps . In: McCarthy JG Plastic Surgery: General Principles. Philadelphia, PA; W.B. Saunders
Company 1990: 379-411
14
Taylor G I, Palmer J H.
The vascular territories (angiosomes) of the body: experimental study and clinical
applications.
Br J Plast Surg.
1987;
40
113-141
15
Hallock G G, Rice D C.
Evidence for the efficacy of TRAM flap delay in a rat model.
Plast Reconstr Surg.
1995;
96
1351-1357
16
Clugston P A, Perry L C, Fisher J et al..
A rat transverse rectus abdominis musculocutaneous flap model: effects of pharmacological
manipulation.
Ann Plast Surg.
1995;
34
154-160
17
Sasaki G H, Pang C Y.
Hemodynamics and viability of acute neurovascular island skin flaps in rats.
Plast Reconstr Surg.
1980;
65
152-158
18 Daniel R K, Kerrigan C L.
Principles and physiology of skin flap surgery . In: McCarthy JG Plastic Surgery: General Principles. Philadelphia; W.B. Saunders
Company 1990: 275-328
19
Gosain A, Chang N, Mathes S et al..
A study of the relationship between blood flow and bacterial inoculation in musculocutaneous
and fasciocutaneous flaps.
Plast Reconstr Surg.
1990;
86
1152-1162
Sukru YazarM.D.
Sancaktar Tekkesi Sok., Fen Apt. No: 37/29
34310 Kocamustafapasa, Istanbul, Turkey