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Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04687345

Lateral Supramalleolar Perforator Flap Reconstruction Through Branches Outside of the Ankle Tissue Defects

Clinical Research of Using Lateral Supramalleolar Perforator Flap Reconstruction Through Branches Outside of the Ankle Tissue Defects

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
15 (actual)
Sponsor
National Defense Medical Center, Taiwan · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
20 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The lateral ankle is a common site of tissue defects and the defects in this area are often accompanied by exposure of the fibula and tendons. Microsurgical tissue transfer or a pedicled flap is needed to cover those exposures for even a relatively small defect due to the insufficiency of the local cutaneous and muscle flap in this area. Koshima et al. and Wei et al. began to propose the concept of localized perforator flaps, which were initially applied to free perforator flaps. The main benefits of such localized perforator flaps are described below. 1. It preserves vital blood vessels and the underlying muscles and fascia. 2. Complications in the donor area are rare and can be direct or partial sutures. 3. Not technically demanding, although we need to find the vessel but not the vessel junction. 4. Shorter surgery time. There are many choices of perforator flaps for lateral ankle soft tissue defects, including lateral upper ankle flap, retrograde anterior tibial artery flap, retrograde gastrocnemius flap, etc. Among them, the lateral upper ankle flap is one of the flaps commonly used for reconstruction of lateral ankle tissue defects, and the research on the lateral upper peroneal artery perforator flap is limited.

Detailed description

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the clinical application of the peroneal artery perforator flap with or without split-thickness skin grafting for soft tissue reconstruction of the bony defect of the lateral malleolus of the ankle joints. Reconstruction using a peroneal artery perforator flap with or without split-thickness skin grafting was performed for 10 men and 5 women patients with defects in the lateral malleolus. The mean age was 53.7 years with the age range between 22 and 89 years, and the mean size of the flaps was 40 cm\^2. The soft tissue defects were caused by a diabetic foot (6 patients), infected bursitis (1 patient), chronic osteomyelitis (2 patients), and trauma (6 patients). Three of six diabetes mellitus patients also had peripheral arterial occlusive disease. The flaps were elevated in the form of a perforator flap, and split-thickness skin grafting was performed over the flaps and adjoining raw areas. The pedicled supramalleolar perforator flap is classified into two categories: (A) propeller and (B) rotation flaps. The mean follow-up duration was 30 months postsurgical.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2007-01-01
Primary completion
2016-12-12
Completion
2018-12-12
First posted
2020-12-29
Last updated
2020-12-29

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04687345. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.