Flap reconstruction following Fournier's gangrene: A systematic review of techniques and outcomes
Research article published in Burns : journal of the International Society for Burn Injuries (2026)
Abstract
Fournier's gangrene is a life-threatening necrotizing soft tissue infection of the perineal and genital regions that often results in extensive tissue loss and complex reconstructive challenges. While initial management relies on aggressive debridement and source control, the subsequent reconstruction of perineoscrotal defects is critical to restore function, protect exposed structures, and preserve aesthetic and psychological well-being. Flap-based techniques, including fasciocutaneous and musculocutaneous options, are increasingly favored over skin grafts or secondary healing, particularly in the setting of exposed testes, urethra, or bone. We conducted a systematic review of 107 studies published between 1967 and 2024, encompassing 619 patients and 625 flaps, to comprehensively evaluate the types, indications, and outcomes of flap reconstruction following Fournier's gangrene. Medial thigh, pudendal thigh, anterolateral thigh (ALT), and gracilis muscle flaps emerged as the most commonly utilized, with regional flaps overwhelmingly preferred over free tissue transfer. The primary indications included coverage of exposed vital structures (52 %), functional restoration (39 %), and cosmesis (4 %). Despite the high-risk nature of the patient population, complication rates were low, with flap loss reported in only 1.6 % of cases. Functional and aesthetic outcomes were generally satisfactory, though standardized reporting tools were rarely used. Our findings highlight the apparent reliability, versatility, and safety of regional flaps in Fournier's gangrene reconstruction and underscore the need for greater standardization in outcome assessment and flap selection algorithms. This review serves as the most comprehensive synthesis to date and provides an evidence-based foundation for flap reconstruction decision-making in this devastating condition.
Abstract sourced from PubMed (NCBI) for the cited record. See the original publication for the authoritative version.
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 systematic review of 107 studies (1967-2024), covering 619 patients and 625 flaps, evaluated flap-based reconstruction after Fournier's gangrene and found that regional fasciocutaneous and musculocutaneous flaps (medial thigh, pudendal thigh, ALT, gracilis) were strongly preferred over free transfer, that the main indications were covering exposed vital structures (52%), functional restoration (39%), and cosmesis (4%), and that flap loss occurred in only 1.6% of cases. For hirudotherapy, the connection is that compromised or congested flaps are the scenario in which medicinal leeches are sometimes used for salvage, and this review quantifies how often these reconstructions and their complications arise. The caveat is that this review summarizes other studies' flap outcomes and never examines or mentions leech therapy; the low reported flap-loss rate reflects surgical technique, not any leech-related intervention, so it provides background on the clinical landscape rather than evidence for hirudotherapy.
Citation
Flap reconstruction following Fournier's gangrene: A systematic review of techniques and outcomes.
Alammar et al. · Burns : journal of the International Society for Burn Injuries, 2026
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