Extremity and Mandibular Reconstruction After Gunshot Trauma-Orthoplastic Strategies from Five Years of Humanitarian Missions in a Resource-Limited Setting
Research article published in Journal of clinical medicine (2025)
Abstract
Background: Surgical care in conflict regions like Tigray, Ethiopia, faces severe challenges due to limited resources, infrastructural deficiencies, and high trauma burden. From 2019 to 2023, a multidisciplinary team conducted five humanitarian missions focusing on orthoplastic reconstruction of extremity and mandibular injuries from high-energy gunshot trauma. Methods: A retrospective analysis was performed on 98 patients who underwent free or pedicled flap reconstruction. Data included demographics, flap type, technique, complications, follow-up, and early clinical outcomes score as well as mobility scores. Flaps were harvested using loupes anastomosis performed using microscopes, depending on availability. Results: Among 98 patients (25.5% female, 74.5% male), 69 free flaps and 38 pedicled flaps were performed. Free fibula flaps (n = 54) included 33 mandibular and 21 extremity reconstructions. Additional flaps included ALT, gracilis, and LD flaps. Pedicled flaps included 18 fibula and 20 ALT/LD flaps. Mean age was 35.5 years; mean operative time was 429.5 min, with mandibular fibula transfers being longest. Microsurgical techniques were used in 34% of cases. Median follow-up was 10 months. Microsurgical complications occurred in 18.4%, mainly in fibula transfers (25.9%). Non-microsurgical issues included wound infections (n = 15), graft loss (n = 3), and bleeding (n = 5). Flap loss occurred in 16.3% overall. Early clinical outcome results were good (30.6%), acceptable (28.6%), and moderate (24.5%). Conclusions: Orthoplastic reconstruction using both free and pedicled flaps is feasible in low-resource, conflict settings. Despite infrastructural challenges, functional outcomes were achievable, supporting the value of adaptable microsurgical strategies in humanitarian surgery.
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 retrospective analysis of 98 gunshot-trauma patients treated across five humanitarian missions in Tigray, Ethiopia (2019-2023) reported 69 free and 38 pedicled flap reconstructions (including 54 free fibula flaps) performed in a resource-limited setting, with microsurgical complications in 18.4% and overall flap loss of 16.3%, concluding that orthoplastic reconstruction with free and pedicled flaps is feasible and can yield acceptable functional outcomes even under infrastructural constraints. The hirudotherapy relevance is that venous congestion of free flaps, a leading driver of the flap-loss figures reported here, is the precise complication for which medicinal leeches are used as an adjunctive salvage measure, especially where advanced monitoring is scarce. The caveat is that this is an observational field cohort that does not use or mention leech therapy; it documents the burden of flap complications in austere settings but provides no direct evidence about leeches.
Citation
Extremity and Mandibular Reconstruction After Gunshot Trauma-Orthoplastic Strategies from Five Years of Humanitarian Missions in a Resource-Limited Setting.
Koenig et al. · Journal of clinical medicine, 2025
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