1. A comparative study of the heterodigital neurovascular island flap in thumb reconstruction, with and without nerve reconnection.
- Author
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Adani R, Squarzina PB, Castagnetti C, Laganá A, Pancaldi G, and Caroli A
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Anastomosis, Surgical, Child, Child, Preschool, Cicatrix, Hypertrophic etiology, Female, Finger Joint physiopathology, Fingers innervation, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neuroma etiology, Patient Satisfaction, Peripheral Nervous System Neoplasms etiology, Range of Motion, Articular, Sensory Thresholds, Skin Transplantation methods, Surgical Flaps adverse effects, Thermosensing, Thumb physiopathology, Surgical Flaps methods, Thumb injuries, Thumb surgery, Ulnar Nerve surgery
- Abstract
41 heterodigital neurovascular island flaps were used to cover defects of the tactile pad of the thumb in 17 years. With an average follow-up of 75.5 months, 30 patients were reviewed. 17 were treated by the original Littler technique and 13 were treated with the same flap reconstruction but with division of the digital nerve innervating the flap and re-anastomosis of this nerve to the proximal nerve end of the ulnar digital nerve of the thumb. Good aesthetic and functional results were achieved in both groups. Sensory acuity did not appear to decrease with time. The nerve reconnection technique solves the "double sensibility" phenomenon (present in 41.1% of our cases treated by the original technique), but two-point discrimination is less than that achieved by the Littler technique. Most complaints were related to the donor site such as hypertrophic scarring or scar contracture and cold intolerance, but these did not cause any real functional impairment.
- Published
- 1994
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