Cholok David, Saberski Ean, Lowenberg David W
Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, California.
Department of General Surgery, Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, Bethesda, Maryland.
Semin Plast Surg. 2022 Nov 16;36(4):233-242. doi: 10.1055/s-0042-1758205. eCollection 2022 Nov.
Composite injuries to the lower extremity from etiologies including trauma and infection present a complex dilemma for the reconstructive surgeon, and require multidisciplinary collaboration amongst plastic, vascular, and orthopaedic surgical specialties. Here we present our algorithm for lower-extremity reconstructive management, refined over the last decades to provide an optimized outcome for our patients. Reconstruction is predicated on the establishment of a clean and living wound, where quality of the wound-bed is prioritized over timing to soft-tissue coverage. Once established, soft-tissues and fractures are provisionally stabilized; our preference for definitive coverage is for microvascular free-tissue, due to the paucity of healthy soft-tissue available at the injury, and ability to avoid the zone of injury for microvascular anastomosis. Finally, definitive bony reconstruction is dictated by the length and location of long-bone defect, with a preference to utilize bone transport for defects longer than 5 cm.
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