Kalimuthu Ramasamy, Herrmann Glenn E
Division of Plastic, Reconstructive, and Cosmetic Surgery (MC958), University of Illinois at Chicago College of Medicine, Suite 515 CSN, 820 South Wood Street, Chicago, IL, 60612-7316, USA.
Hand (N Y). 2006 Dec;1(2):94-7. doi: 10.1007/s11552-006-9005-3.
Since the first successful replantation of a human thumb reported by Komatsu and Tamai in 1968, thousands of severed digits and body parts have been successfully salvaged. Restoration of anatomic form and function are the goals of replantation after traumatic tissue amputation. Regardless of anatomic location, methods include microsurgical replantation and nonmicrosurgical replantation, such as composite graft techniques. Numerous techniques to maximize tissue survival after revascularization have been described, including "pocket procedures" to salvage composite grafts, interposition vein grafts, and medicinal leeches to name a few. Artery-to-venous anastomoses have been performed with successful "arterialization" of the distal venous system in fingertip replantation. Although there is documented survival of free venous cutaneous flaps, to our knowledge this is the first report of a replanted composite body part (bone, tendon, soft tissues, and skin) utilizing exclusively multiple, microvascular, nonarterialized venous-venous anastomoses. We present a patient with an isolated band saw fillet amputation to the back of the thumb at the metacarpal-phalangeal joint region, resulting in a composite graft composed of bone, tendon, soft tissue, and skin. The hand wound provided no viable regional arterial inflow source, but there were multiple good caliber superficial veins present. The amputated tissues were replanted and revascularized by using only venous blood flow. The replanted part survival was 100% with excellent function of the digit. We conclude that a hand composite body part involving bone, tendon, soft tissues, and skin can survive replantation with a strict venous blood supply if sufficient good caliber, microvascular, venous-venous anastomoses are performed, granted that arterial inflow options are not available. This is an isolated case, yet introduces a new way of thinking regarding tissue replantation.
自1968年小松和玉井首次成功再植人类拇指以来,数千例离断指体和身体部位已成功挽救。创伤性组织离断后再植的目标是恢复解剖形态和功能。无论解剖位置如何,方法包括显微外科再植和非显微外科再植,如复合组织移植技术。已经描述了许多在血管再通后最大化组织存活的技术,包括挽救复合组织移植的“袋状手术”、静脉移植和药用水蛭等。在指尖再植中,已进行动脉-静脉吻合,使远端静脉系统成功“动脉化”。虽然有游离静脉皮瓣存活的记录,但据我们所知,这是首例仅利用多个微血管、非动脉化静脉-静脉吻合进行再植的复合身体部位(骨骼、肌腱、软组织和皮肤)的报告。我们报告一例患者,其拇指掌指关节区域背侧被带锯斜行离断,形成由骨骼、肌腱、软组织和皮肤组成的复合组织移植。手部伤口没有可行的局部动脉血流来源,但有多个口径良好的浅静脉。仅通过静脉血流对离断组织进行再植并实现血管再通。再植部分存活100%,手指功能良好。我们得出结论,如果没有动脉血流选择,只要进行足够数量的口径良好的微血管静脉-静脉吻合,涉及骨骼、肌腱、软组织和皮肤的手部复合身体部位在严格的静脉血供下再植也可存活。这是一个孤立的病例,但引入了关于组织再植的新思维方式。