El-Khatib Hamdy A
Department of Plastic Surgery, Rumailah Hospital, Doha, State of Qatar.
Plast Reconstr Surg. 2004 Feb;113(2):545-9. doi: 10.1097/01.PRS.0000101820.53946.F6.
The possibility of transferring vascularized tissue to restore function and to resurface large defects, together with the use of composite flaps, has led to recent advances in "one-stage" reconstructive surgical procedures. On the basis of a previous study of the blood supply of the adipofascial flap and a new study of the blood supply of the flexor carpi radialis tendon from the transfascial and direct branches of the radial artery, a fascial island flap complete with tendon was devised and used to treat four male patients who had sustained traumatic soft-tissue losses on the dorsum of the hand and segmental losses of the extensor digitorum communis. The use of a completely vascularized, single-stage, composite flap did not involve sacrifice of the radial artery, the functional and aesthetic results were good, and there was minimal donor-site morbidity.