CHAPTER 17 Flaps and Plasties
Indications
Contraindications (All Relative)
It is particularly important to ask the patient about any history of abnormal scarring, keloids, or poor healing. Certain areas of the body are especially prone to hypertrophic scar and keloid formation, such as the chest, earlobes, and shoulders (Fig. 17-1). Black skin and children’s skin also tend to scar more. Any patient at high risk for keloid formation should receive thorough preoperative counseling before proceeding with any skin surgery. These patients should be followed closely after surgery because early keloid development may be curtailed by the judicious use of steroid injections and silicone gel sheeting. As a general rule, the physician should avoid the temptation to excise keloids unless special attention is paid to preparation of the area before surgery using intralesional steroids, and the patient agrees contractually to long-term (1 to 2 years) surveillance and follow-up treatment if needed (see Chapter 38, Hypertrophic Scars and Keloids, for details). Conservative methods should generally be tried before reexcision, which potentially could just lead to more scars.
Equipment
Preprocedure Patient Preparation
History and Physical
During the preoperative history, topics of discussion should include the following:
Antibiotic Prophylaxis
See Chapter 222, Prevention and Treatment of Wound Infections.
Preoperative Medications and Anesthesia
The decision on whether to use sedation should be based on personal philosophy, patient desire, and the availability of proper monitoring. When performed correctly, most minor surgical procedures can be completed with minimal discomfort to the patient. However, some sedation may be indicated in anxious patients when the procedure is extensive or if significant discomfort is anticipated (see Chapter 2, Procedural Sedation and Analgesia).
The use of local anesthetic warrants discussion. Lidocaine with epinephrine is preferable to lidocaine alone for nearly all cutaneous procedures. See the discussion regarding the use of epinephrine in the digits and end artery areas in Chapter 4, Local Anesthesia. In the doses administered in local anesthesia, epinephrine is generally safe and its vasoconstrictive properties are important in controlling bleeding and potentiating analgesia. Because epinephrine takes 7 to 10 minutes to achieve full effect, it is advisable to anesthetize the surgical site before preparing and draping the patient. The addition of 1 mL of sodium bicarbonate to every 9 mL of lidocaine with epinephrine helps neutralize the acidity of the solution and thus decreases the pain with injection. The addition of sodium bicarbonate to plain lidocaine does not benefit to the same extent because plain lidocaine is not as acidified. Bupivacaine (Marcaine) precipitates at a neutral pH and should never be used with sodium bicarbonate. When the longer-acting properties of bupivacaine are desired, it may be helpful to anesthetize the region using lidocaine with epinephrine (buffered with sodium bicarbonate) before injecting bupivacaine.
Technique
Also see Chapters 22 through 25, which cover various types of laceration and incision repair.
Flaps are composed of skin and subcutaneous tissue cut from the donor site and moved a small distance to a recipient site without removing it from its vascular supply. Local skin flaps consist of rotation flaps that pivot into place and advancement flaps that move laterally. Rotation flaps maintain a base of intact skin, whereas some advancement flaps are completely incised, with blood being supplied only from the subcutaneous tissues. Because flaps carry their own blood supply, it is important to avoid damaging the subdermal vascular plexus or cutting potential nutrient vessels. Flaps created with parallel incisions are at increased risk for necrosis because of limited blood supply, but they are sometimes unavoidable. Figure 17-2 illustrates the proper level for undermining the flap tissue.