Cohen B K, Zabel D D, Newton E D, Catanzariti A R
The Western Pennysylvania Hospital, Pittsburgh, USA.
J Foot Ankle Surg. 1999 Nov-Dec;38(6):388-93. doi: 10.1016/s1067-2516(99)80038-6.
Thirty-three consecutive patients with plantar soft-tissue defects were managed by a single surgeon (EDN) with reconstruction by a medial plantar artery (MPA)-based flap. Foot defects resulted from a combination of abnormal weightbearing distribution and neuropathy secondary to diabetes mellitus in all patients. A retrospective study of diabetic patients from 1984 to 1997 with foot defects reconstructed with a MPA-based flap were reviewed. Thirty-three patients (age 55 +/- 9) with an average tissue deficit of 13 +/- 9 cm2 had MPA reconstruction of the heel (n = 8), midfoot (n = 23), and forefoot (n = 2). The mean follow-up was 19 months (range, 3 months-5 years). There were four minor complications, including marginal flap necrosis or localized infection, although all healed uneventfully. There were six major complications resulting in loss of the flap and proximal amputation. Out of seven patients, there were 12 rerotations of the previously rotated flap. Various techniques for reconstruction of plantar foot defects have been described in the literature. Utilizing glabrous skin for reconstruction of these defects is appealing for its unique shear and pressure-resisting properties. Surgical management of diabetic foot defects with the medial plantar artery flap is an effective means of soft tissue reconstruction.