Is It Reasonable to Use Indocyanine Green Fluorescence Imaging to Determine the Border of Pedicled TRAM Flap Zone IV?
Research article published in Plastic and reconstructive surgery. Global open (2020)
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The contralateral lateral section (zone IV) of a pedicled transverse rectus abdominis musculocutaneous (TRAM) flap is generally removed intraoperatively. The border of zone IV is usually identified anatomically using the Hartrampf classification. In this study, we used the indocyanine green (ICG) fluorescence method to determine the border of zone IV and find the correlation with clinical flap outcome. METHODS: The study recruited breast cancer patients who underwent a pedicled TRAM flap reconstruction. The border of zone IV was identified using the intraoperative ICG fluorescence imaging. The medial border of the removed specimen was sent for a pathological examination of vascular density. RESULTS: A total of 29 patients underwent a pedicled TRAM reconstruction. In 16 patients, the border of zone IV identified by ICG fluorescent imaging was identical to the anatomical border. The ICG imaging showed distinct perfusion patterns, which we divided into 4 categories: sequential, simultaneous, low midline scar, and delayed pattern. Overall, there were no patient with total flap loss, 1 patient had a partial flap loss and 4 patients had a fat necrosis. Neither the ICG perfusion time nor the pathological vascular density correlates with the clinical flap outcome. The delayed ICG perfusion pattern (category IV) has the highest fat necrosis rate, although it is not statistically significant. CONCLUSIONS: In this study, more than half of the patients have ICG perfusion corresponding with the Hartrampf zone, which reflected the conventional practice of zone IV pedicled TRAM flap removal. Some ICG perfusion patterns could be helpful, especially in low midline and delayed pattern.
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 study of 29 breast cancer patients used intraoperative indocyanine green (ICG) fluorescence imaging to delineate the perfusion border of zone IV in pedicled TRAM flaps, identifying four distinct perfusion patterns and finding that neither ICG perfusion time nor pathological vascular density correlated with clinical flap outcome, with the delayed-perfusion pattern showing the highest (non-significant) fat necrosis rate. For hirudotherapy this is relevant chiefly as background on flap perfusion assessment: gauging arterial inflow and tissue perfusion is the counterpart to recognizing the venous-outflow failure (congestion) that medicinal leeches treat, so perfusion-mapping tools like ICG help identify at-risk flap segments. The abstract addresses perfusion imaging rather than venous congestion or leeching, and with 29 patients and no statistically significant outcome correlations it is a small, preliminary methodological study with no direct bearing on leech therapy.
Citation
Is It Reasonable to Use Indocyanine Green Fluorescence Imaging to Determine the Border of Pedicled TRAM Flap Zone IV?.
Chirappapha et al. · Plastic and reconstructive surgery. Global open, 2020
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