Ascherman Jeffrey A, Zeidler Kamakshi R, Jacoby Adam, Appel James Z, Berkowitz R Laurence, Castle John, Colwell Amy, Chun Yoon S, Johnson Debra J, Mohebali Khashayar
New York, N.Y.; Campbell, Sacramento, and Corte Madera, Calif.; Charlotte, N.C.; and Boston, Mass. From the Division of Plastic Surgery, Department of Surgery, Columbia University Medical Center; Aesthetic and Reconstructive Plastic Surgery; The Plastic Surgery Center; Mohebali Plastic Surgery; Novant Health Appel Plastic Surgery; the Division of Plastic Surgery, University of Massachusetts Memorial Medical Center; the Division of Plastic Surgery, Massachusetts General Hospital; and Brigham and Women's Faulkner Hospital, Harvard Medical School.
Plast Reconstr Surg. 2016 Jan;137(1):31-35. doi: 10.1097/PRS.0000000000001865.
Implant-based breast reconstruction is the most common reconstructive technique in the United States. Despite its popularity, saline-based tissue expansion still has its limitations, including lengthy expansion times, large uncomfortable bolus dosing, and frequent percutaneous injections/expansion visits. Ideally, a novel technology would eliminate frequent, percutaneous saline injections and allow patients to perform expansion at home, reducing the disruptive experience of current tissue expansion.
Within the past 6 years, the AeroForm tissue expander system has used remotely activated carbon dioxide release as the fill medium instead of saline, eliminating many limitations of traditional tissue expanders. In this article, the authors first review the relevant literature concerning carbon dioxide-based tissue expansion in animal and human models. The authors then analyze the similarities and differences between two groundbreaking human trials (i.e., Patient Activated Controlled Expansion and AirXpanders Patient Activated Controlled Tissue Expander) with carbon dioxide-based expanders and discuss the risks and benefits associated with this new technology.
At their site, the authors have enrolled 34 patients using 36 experimental devices in total, and have found significantly shorter expansion and overall reconstruction times in the patient-controlled tissue expander group.
The authors believe that carbon dioxide-based devices may play a significant role in the future of implant-based breast reconstruction, and may be widely applicable to other areas of plastic surgery that also involve tissue expansion.
基于植入物的乳房重建是美国最常见的重建技术。尽管很受欢迎,但基于盐水的组织扩张仍有其局限性,包括扩张时间长、大量注射带来的不适、频繁的经皮注射/扩张就诊。理想情况下,一项新技术将消除频繁的经皮盐水注射,并允许患者在家中进行扩张,减少当前组织扩张带来的不良体验。
在过去6年中,AeroForm组织扩张器系统使用远程激活的二氧化碳释放作为填充介质而非盐水,消除了传统组织扩张器的许多局限性。在本文中,作者首先回顾了关于基于二氧化碳的组织扩张在动物和人体模型中的相关文献。然后,作者分析了两项具有开创性的人体试验(即患者激活控制扩张和AirXpanders患者激活控制组织扩张器)中基于二氧化碳的扩张器之间的异同,并讨论了与这项新技术相关的风险和益处。
在他们的机构,作者共招募了34名患者使用36个实验装置,并且发现在患者自控组织扩张器组中扩张和整体重建时间显著缩短。
作者认为基于二氧化碳的装置可能在未来基于植入物的乳房重建中发挥重要作用,并且可能广泛应用于其他也涉及组织扩张的整形手术领域。