Buncke H J, Buncke G M, Lineaweaver W C, Oliva A, Alpert B S, Hing D N, Siko P P
Microsurgical Replantation Transplantation Department, Davies Medical Center, San Francisco, California 94402.
World J Surg. 1991 Jul-Aug;15(4):418-28. doi: 10.1007/BF01675636.
Microvascular surgery has revolutionized the field of emergency hand surgery in the areas of replantation and microvascular transplantation. Amputated parts from as small as a distal phalanx to the entire extremity can now be successfully replanted and unreplanted, or missing parts can be restored and reconstructed with immediate microvascular transplants (MVTs). MVTs can be used to cover exposed vital structures and replace missing complex parts. Part or whole digits can be reconstructed, with up to 4 toe transplants. Joints, bones, and muscles can be replaced with osteocutaneous and neuromyovascular transplants. Using the same approach for multiple replants, teams of 4 to 6 surgeons operating simulatneously and sequentially around the clock can accomplish multiple microvascular transplants in the acute setting. The classical principle of hand surgery, "preserve length and function", can now be modified to "restore length and function."