Department of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY 10029, USA.
Department of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY 10029, USA.
Am J Otolaryngol. 2019 May-Jun;40(3):418-422. doi: 10.1016/j.amjoto.2019.03.010. Epub 2019 Mar 16.
Microvascular free tissue transfer has become the standard for reconstruction for large defects. With long operative times and an increased surface area exposed, transient hypothermia is common, but it is unclear how this impacts surgical outcomes. This study evaluated the impact of core body temperature on free tissue flap outcomes in patients undergoing microvascular reconstruction.
Retrospective data analysis.
Mount Sinai Hospital; NYC, NY; 2007-2016.
Demographic information, mean/minimum/maximum body temperatures, and the presence of flap complications (venous thrombosis, arterial insufficiency, flap death, wound infection/dehiscence, fistula, chyle leak, hematoma/seroma) of 519 free tissue transfer patients were documented. Binomial logistic regression was used to examine associations between the presence of flap complications and mean temperature. Statistical analysis used SPSS, with p-values ≤0.05 deemed statistically significant.
393 soft-tissue and 125 osteocutaneous flaps were included. 19.8% (n = 103) patients had the presence of ≥1 flap complication, while 80.2% (n = 416) did not. Average temperature for all patients was 36.12 ± 0.84 °C, with minimum at 34.43 ± 0.97 °C and maximum at 37.24 ± 1.23 °C. After controlling for several factors including: tumor stage, radiation, diabetes, BMI, age, sex, and flap type, there was a significant association between flap complications and mean intraoperative temperature (Exp(B) = 1.559, p = 0.004).
Higher intraoperative temperatures were associated with worse outcomes. A mild relative hypothermia may improve flap outcomes in this population. This represents the largest study to date evaluating the impact of intraoperative temperature on free tissue transfer outcomes.
游离组织移植已成为重建大面积缺损的标准方法。由于手术时间长,暴露的表面积增加,短暂性体温过低很常见,但目前尚不清楚这对手术结果有何影响。本研究评估了核心体温对接受显微血管重建的游离组织瓣患者的影响。
回顾性数据分析。
西奈山医院;纽约,NY;2007-2016 年。
记录了 519 例游离组织移植患者的人口统计学信息、平均/最小/最大体温以及皮瓣并发症(静脉血栓形成、动脉功能不全、皮瓣死亡、伤口感染/裂开、瘘管、乳糜漏、血肿/血清肿)的存在情况。使用二项逻辑回归检查皮瓣并发症的存在与平均温度之间的关联。统计分析采用 SPSS,p 值≤0.05 认为具有统计学意义。
包括 393 例软组织和 125 例骨皮瓣。19.8%(n=103)的患者存在≥1 种皮瓣并发症,80.2%(n=416)的患者不存在。所有患者的平均体温为 36.12±0.84°C,最低为 34.43±0.97°C,最高为 37.24±1.23°C。在控制了肿瘤分期、放疗、糖尿病、BMI、年龄、性别和皮瓣类型等多个因素后,皮瓣并发症与术中平均温度之间存在显著关联(Exp(B)=1.559,p=0.004)。
较高的术中温度与较差的结果相关。轻度相对低温可能会改善该人群的皮瓣结果。这是迄今为止评估术中温度对游离组织移植结果影响的最大研究。