Free temporal artery posterior auricular skin (TAPAS) flap: A new option in facial and intra-oral reconstruction
Research article published in Microsurgery (2017)
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is a limited availability of suitable microvascular free flap options for the reconstruction of small to medium-sized facial and intraoral defects. The purpose of this report is to present a new free temporal artery based posterior auricular skin (TAPAS) flap in facial and intraoral reconstruction. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Four patients were deemed suitable for TAPAS flap reconstruction and consisted of two males and two females with a mean age of 43 years (range 22-66). Defect aetiology and location comprised of post-traumatic lower eyelid scarring, late lower lip scarring post tumour resection, and floor of mouth and tongue defects following tumour resection. The dimensions of the resultant defects ranged from 25 × 50 mm (smallest) to 40 × 70 mm (largest). All patients underwent microvascular reconstruction using a free fasciocutaneous TAPAS flap raised from the retroauricular region based on the superficial temporal vessels. RESULTS: The maximal pedicle length was 60 mm and the maximum flap size measured 40 mm by 70 mm. The latter patient required skin grafting of the postauricular donor site. Postoperatively, there was one case of mild transient venous congestion that spontaneously resolved after 2 days and one case of minor partial flap dehiscence that required re-suturing. Follow-up time ranged from 6 to 14 months. Overall, all flaps survived with good aesthetic and functional outcome. CONCLUSION: The TAPAS flap is a small flap with exceptional qualities and may be a useful addition to the armamentarium of free flaps in facial and oral reconstructions. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Microsurgery 37:525-530, 2017.
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 Microsurgery (2017) report introduces the free temporal artery based posterior auricular skin (TAPAS) flap for facial and intraoral reconstruction in four patients; per the abstract, all flaps survived with good aesthetic and functional outcome, with one case of mild transient venous congestion that resolved spontaneously after two days and one minor partial dehiscence requiring re-suturing. For hirudotherapy it is relevant because venous congestion of free flaps is the indication for the FDA-cleared medicinal leech, and this small series documents a congestion episode that resolved without leech intervention, contributing to the picture of how often and how severely such congestion occurs in microsurgical practice. Caveat: with only four patients and no control group this is a preliminary small case series describing a novel technique, not comparative evidence, and it does not study or recommend hirudotherapy.
Citation
Free temporal artery posterior auricular skin (TAPAS) flap: A new option in facial and intra-oral reconstruction.
Lassus et al. · Microsurgery, 2017
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