American Society of Hirudotherapy

More consistent postoperative care and monitoring can reduce costs following microvascular free flap reconstruction

Research article published in Journal of reconstructive microsurgery (2010)

Last Updated: June 18, 2026Reviewed by: ASH Editorial Board
Research article — evidence reviewArticle reference
Evidence: Observational studyClinical TrialsHaddock et al. · Journal of reconstructive microsurgery, 2010

Abstract

Great variability exists in microsurgical postoperative care in the United States. Lack of standardized postoperative monitoring protocols and appropriate training of monitoring personnel leads to inefficiency and increased cost of providing microsurgical postoperative care. A 45-question survey was sent to all plastic surgery and plastic surgery-based microsurgery program directors in the United States. Questions focused on the number and type of flaps performed, length of stay, complications, postoperative monitoring setting, training provided to monitoring personnel, and limitations in flap monitoring. The response rate was 31% with 3407 microvascular free flaps performed annually at 26 centers. A total of 1533 flaps were monitored in the intensive care unit (ICU) for an average of 3.1 days. In 45% of responding centers patients were cared for in an ICU secondary to a lack of adequately trained nurses at alternative sites. Printed postoperative protocols were provided to nurses in 39% of centers. With a comparative increase cost of $2878 to $3345 per day for ICU care, this translates into an annual increased cost of $13.7 to $15.9 million to the responding centers. Improved nursing training and the use of standardized postoperative protocols may allow patients to be monitored in non-ICU settings postoperatively, thereby reducing the costs associated with providing postoperative microsurgical care.

Abstract sourced from PubMed (NCBI) for the cited record. See the original publication for the authoritative version.

Publication typeJournal ArticleMulticenter Study
Indexed MeSH termsAnalysis of VarianceCost ControlHumansInservice TrainingIntensive Care UnitsLength of StayMicrosurgeryMonitoring, PhysiologicPostoperative CarePostoperative ComplicationsPlastic Surgery ProceduresSurgical Flaps

Summary

Peer-reviewed clinical and outcomes research relevant to medicinal leech therapy and its biology. Indexed in PubMed and verified against the NCBI record.

Why This Matters for Hirudotherapy

This multicenter survey of US plastic-surgery and microsurgery program directors found wide variability in postoperative free-flap monitoring, with many patients placed in the ICU largely because of a lack of adequately trained nurses elsewhere, and estimated that standardized protocols and better-trained personnel could shift monitoring to non-ICU settings and reduce substantial annual costs. It matters to hirudotherapy because leech therapy for venous congestion is delivered and supervised within exactly this postoperative free-flap monitoring infrastructure, so the staffing, training, and protocol gaps documented here shape whether congestion is detected early enough for any salvage intervention to be attempted. As a survey study with a modest response rate, its cost figures and practice patterns describe self-reported institutional behavior rather than measured clinical outcomes, and it does not evaluate leech therapy itself.

Citation

More consistent postoperative care and monitoring can reduce costs following microvascular free flap reconstruction.

Haddock et al. · Journal of reconstructive microsurgery, 2010

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