Rose E H, Norris M S, Kowalski T A, Lucas A, Fleegler E J
Division of Plastic Surgery, Stanford University School of Medicine, Calif.
J Hand Surg Am. 1989 May;14(3):513-8. doi: 10.1016/s0363-5023(89)80014-0.
With the exception of children, amputations at the level of the lunula survive poorly by direct reattachment. Microsurgical replantation is costly and often fails because of poor venous drainage. In a series of seven adult patients the severed tip was filleted and replaced as a "cap" over the skeletonized distal phalanx of the stump. A 2 mm remnant of germinal matrix was preserved for nail regrowth. The reconstructed digits, although shortened by an average of 6 mm, give the "illusion" of a normal finger. All were successful with small areas of tip necrosis in two, healing by secondary reepithelialization. Mean static two-point discrimination was 6.5 mm (range, 3 to 10 mm) and pulp pinch was 67% of normal. The "cap" technique of nonmicrosurgical reattachment is a simple, reliable method of functional preservation of pulp tissue, as well as normal esthetic appearance of the nail complex.