Markley J M, Faulkner J A, Côté C
Department of Surgery, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor.
Plast Reconstr Surg. 1989 Sep;84(3):424-31; discussion 432-3.
Restoration of normal facial movement after long-term facial paralysis with muscle atrophy has not yet been achieved reliably by either free grafts, in which fibers degenerate and regenerate, or by grafts made with microneurovascular repair, in which most fibers survive. Our purpose was to compare the structural and functional properties of free muscle grafts and continuously perfused muscle flaps transplanted into the faces of monkeys. In adult monkeys, the facial muscles were replaced by either a free graft of a donor muscle from the lower limb or a denervated flap of ipsilateral temporalis muscle. Each graft or flap was reinnervated with the preserved buccal branch of the facial nerve. The control muscles, grafts, and flaps were examined 90 days later for gross appearance, contractile properties, and fiber areas. Compared with muscle flaps, free grafts showed greater adaptability to the new location and innervation and a closer approximation to the structural and functional properties of the original facial musculature.