Reconstruction of a Volar Thumb Defect Using a Princeps Pollicis Artery Perforator Flap: A Case Report of Partial Flap Congestion and Successful Salvage
Research article published in Cureus (2026)
Abstract
Reconstruction of volar thumb defects remains challenging due to the requirement for durable, sensate, and glabrous tissue. Local perforator-based flaps have emerged as reliable options that preserve thumb length and function. We present a case of a 21-year-old female with a volar soft tissue defect over the proximal phalanx of the right thumb following electrical injury. Initial debridement was performed on the first day post-injury, followed by reconstruction using a princeps pollicis artery perforator flap on day 7. The flap measured 2.8 × 2.3 cm and was elevated under brachial plexus block anesthesia. Postoperatively, the patient developed venous congestion between days 3 and 7, which was managed conservatively with limb elevation, partial suture release, and culture-directed antibiotic therapy. The flap subsequently stabilized, with satisfactory healing. At six months' follow-up, the patient demonstrated full opposition to all fingers, a power grip of 250 N, and key pinch strength of 5 kg, with the ability to perform daily activities. Mild extension lag of 15 degrees and scarring were noted as residual drawbacks. This case highlights the utility of the princeps pollicis artery perforator flap as a single-stage, function-preserving reconstructive option for volar thumb defects, even in the presence of postoperative complications.
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 Cureus (2026) case report describes reconstruction of a volar thumb defect in a 21-year-old woman after electrical injury using a princeps pollicis artery perforator flap; per the abstract, the flap developed venous congestion between postoperative days 3 and 7 that was managed conservatively with limb elevation, partial suture release, and culture-directed antibiotics, after which it stabilized with satisfactory six-month function. It is relevant to hirudotherapy because postoperative venous congestion of flaps is the precise clinical problem for which the FDA-cleared medicinal leech is used, and this case documents an instance where congestion was salvaged without leeches, helping situate where adjunctive measures do and do not become necessary. Caveat: this is a single case report with no comparison group and does not involve leech therapy, so it cannot establish that any one congestion-management strategy is superior; it serves as illustrative context only.
Citation
Reconstruction of a Volar Thumb Defect Using a Princeps Pollicis Artery Perforator Flap: A Case Report of Partial Flap Congestion and Successful Salvage.
Zin et al. · Cureus, 2026
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