The Effect of Medial Circumflex Artery Variation on the Success Rate of Gracilis Flap Procedures: A Systematic Review
Research article published in Cureus (2024)
Abstract
This systematic review examines the impact of anatomical variations in the medial circumflex artery (MCA) on the outcomes of gracilis flap procedures in reconstructive surgery. Incorporating 16 studies, this review analyzes how different MCA variants influence the success rates of these procedures. Findings highlight critical MCA variations, including cases of split and double pedicles and differences in pedicle length and branching patterns, which can complicate flap harvesting and vascular anastomosis. The studies consistently underscore the need for precise preoperative imaging and intraoperative adaptability to manage these anatomical differences effectively. Notably, variants with shorter or branched pedicles present higher risks of partial flap loss and complications, particularly in autologous breast reconstruction and lower extremity repairs. The findings support the adoption of advanced imaging protocols, such as high-resolution Doppler and CT angiography, to enable detailed vascular mapping. Interdisciplinary collaboration among anatomists, radiologists, and surgeons is essential for developing comprehensive strategies tailored to individual anatomical landscapes, optimizing both the success and viability of gracilis flaps. The review emphasizes that understanding MCA variability is crucial for enhancing surgical precision and improving patient outcomes. Standardizing preoperative assessment protocols and exploring alternative flap techniques may mitigate risks associated with MCA variations, advancing the field of reconstructive 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 systematic review of 16 studies analyzed how anatomical variations in the medial circumflex artery (MCA), such as split or double pedicles and differences in pedicle length and branching, affect the success of gracilis flap procedures, concluding that shorter or branched pedicles carry higher risks of partial flap loss and complications and that precise preoperative imaging (high-resolution Doppler, CT angiography) and intraoperative adaptability are essential. For hirudotherapy, the relevance is that partial flap loss and vascular-anastomosis difficulties are the kinds of perfusion failures where venous congestion can develop and where medicinal leeches are applied for salvage, situating the review in the same reconstructive problem space leeching addresses. The honest caveat is that this review synthesizes anatomical and imaging findings and never studies or mentions leech therapy; it explains why some gracilis flaps fail but offers no evidence regarding hirudotherapy as an intervention.
Citation
The Effect of Medial Circumflex Artery Variation on the Success Rate of Gracilis Flap Procedures: A Systematic Review.
Vallas et al. · Cureus, 2024
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