Nanhekhan Lloyd Varriek, Siemionow Maria
Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, The Cleveland Clinic Foundation, OH 44195, USA.
Ann Plast Surg. 2003 Aug;51(2):182-8. doi: 10.1097/01.SAP.0000058500.56551.09.
Recent studies revealed that muscle and musculocutaneous flaps have the lowest peripheral resistance and best flap survival. The critical values of flow rates responsible for this survival have not been established. The authors evaluated the effect of prolonged arterial flow reduction on flow hemodynamics and muscle flap survival, independent of neovascularization using the rat cremaster muscle island flap model for microcirculatory studies. Muscle flaps were implanted into a transparent Plexiglas chamber to allow prolonged observation of the microcirculation. Twenty-six male Sprague-Dawley rats were studied in three experimental groups. In group I (control; no occlusion), after flap isolation, the cremaster muscle was implanted into the tissue chamber and microcirculatory measurements were performed from day 0 to day 3. In group II, after flap isolation, flow in the main feeding artery (the iliac) was reduced with a silk suture loop between 47% and 62%. In group III, arterial flow was reduced between 63% and 80%. Vessel diameters, red blood cell velocities, number of perfused capillaries, and number of rolling, sticking, and transmigrating leukocytes were reduced daily for each rat. Immediately after flow reduction, mean arteriolar (A1) diameters were significantly smaller in group II (25%) and group III (29%) compared with the controls (p<0.05). This reduction was confirmed by a drop in red blood cell velocities of 37% and 58% in groups II and III respectively (p<0.05). At day 1, more than 60% of group III flaps had no arterial flow, whereas normal flow was observed in control flaps for as long as 3 days. In addition, the number of perfused capillaries dropped significantly (by 42%) in group II flaps after 3 days (p<0.05). The authors conclude that continuous arterial blood flow reduction exceeding 60% of the normal volume, independent of angiogenesis, is incompatible with flap viability in the rat cremaster muscle model.
近期研究表明,肌肉瓣和肌皮瓣的外周阻力最低,皮瓣存活率最高。但尚未确定促成这种存活的临界流速值。作者使用大鼠提睾肌岛状皮瓣模型进行微循环研究,评估了长时间动脉血流减少对血流动力学和肌肉瓣存活的影响,且该研究独立于新生血管形成。将肌肉瓣植入透明的有机玻璃腔室,以便长时间观察微循环。在三个实验组中对26只雄性斯普拉格-道利大鼠进行了研究。在第一组(对照组;不进行阻断)中,皮瓣分离后,将提睾肌植入组织腔室,并从第0天至第3天进行微循环测量。在第二组中,皮瓣分离后,用丝线环将主要供血动脉(髂动脉)的血流减少47%至62%。在第三组中,动脉血流减少63%至80%。每天测量每只大鼠的血管直径、红细胞速度、灌注毛细血管数量以及滚动、黏附和迁移的白细胞数量。血流减少后,与对照组相比,第二组(25%)和第三组(29%)的平均小动脉(A1)直径立即显著减小(p<0.05)。第二组和第三组的红细胞速度分别下降37%和58%,证实了这种减小(p<0.05)。在第1天,第三组超过60%的皮瓣无动脉血流,而对照组皮瓣在长达3天内观察到正常血流。此外,3天后第二组皮瓣中灌注毛细血管数量显著下降(42%)(p<0.05)。作者得出结论,在大鼠提睾肌模型中,与血管生成无关,持续动脉血流减少超过正常量的60%与皮瓣存活不相容。