American Society of Hirudotherapy

Role of Infrared Thermography in Planning and Monitoring of Head and Neck Microvascular Flap Reconstruction

Research article published in Plastic and reconstructive surgery. Global open (2023)

Last Updated: June 18, 2026Reviewed by: ASH Editorial Board
Research article — evidence reviewArticle reference
Evidence: Research reportDrug DevelopmentChava SK et al. · Plastic and reconstructive surgery. Global open, 2023

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Reconstruction using microvascular free flaps has become the standard of care in head and neck cancer surgery, and their success lies in appropriate planning, adequate revascularization, and early detection of flap compromise so that prompt salvage is possible. This study evaluates the role of infrared thermography in the planning, execution, and postoperative monitoring of microvascular flaps in head and neck reconstructions. METHODS: This is a single institutional, prospective observational study conducted at a tertiary care hospital in South India for 13 months. Twenty patients were included, and their thermographic images were captured in the preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative settings using the infrared camera FLIR T400. These images were analyzed along with the Doppler, and clinical monitoring findings in all the settings and the temperature difference were calculated postoperatively. RESULTS: Hotspot perforator marking was made using infrared camera, and perforator marking was made using hand-held Doppler preoperatively, which correlated in 93% of cases. Intraoperatively, flap rewarming was successfully demonstrated in 19 of 20 cases. Postoperatively, flap compromise was observed on infrared thermography during the first 24 hours but not on clinical monitoring in three cases. The temperature difference values recorded were 5.4°C, 2.4°C, and 4.9°C. The mean of temperature difference of the healthy flaps was 1.0°C (range 0.1°C-1.8°C). CONCLUSION: Infrared thermography provides simple and reliable imaging, which can be used in perforator marking and flap designing preoperatively and checking the flap perfusion and vascular anastomosis patency intra- and postoperatively.

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

Publication typeJournal Article

Summary

Peer-reviewed research on therapeutic compound development relevant to leech-derived anticoagulants and antithrombotic agents. Indexed in PubMed and verified against the NCBI record.

Why This Matters for Hirudotherapy

This single-institution prospective observational study of 20 head-and-neck microvascular free-flap patients evaluated infrared thermography across the perioperative course, reporting 93% correlation with hand-held Doppler for perforator marking, successful demonstration of flap rewarming in 19 of 20 cases, and detection of flap compromise on thermography within the first 24 hours in three cases where clinical monitoring did not, with healthy flaps showing a mean temperature difference of about 1.0°C. This bears on hirudotherapy because early, reliable detection of flap or replant compromise — especially venous congestion — is what triggers leech application, and a low-cost imaging adjunct that flags failing perfusion sooner could improve the timing of leech-based salvage. As a small prospective series of 20 patients at one center, it is preliminary methodological evidence about a monitoring tool and says nothing about leech therapy itself.

Citation

Role of Infrared Thermography in Planning and Monitoring of Head and Neck Microvascular Flap Reconstruction.

Chava SK et al. · Plastic and reconstructive surgery. Global open, 2023

Added to ASH library: May 28, 2026 · Site last updated: June 18, 2026

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