Volumetric Feasibility of Lumbar Artery Perforator Flaps Compared to Abdominal Flaps for Breast Reconstruction in Low-BMI Patients: A CT-Based Study
Research article published in Aesthetic plastic surgery (2026)
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although abdominal flaps remain the gold standard for autologous breast reconstruction, their use in low-BMI patients-particularly in bilateral cases or when matching a contralateral large breast-can be limited by concerns about insufficient volume. The lumbar artery perforator (LAP) flap has emerged as a potential alternative. This study evaluated its volumetric adequacy in lean patients using computed tomographic angiography (CTA)-based analysis. METHODS: Between 2019 and 2024, patients with BMI ≤ 25 who underwent abdominal flap-based breast reconstruction were retrospectively reviewed. Flap volumes were assessed using CTA. LAP flap volumes were compared with (1) 50% of estimated abdominal flap volume to simulate bilateral reconstruction and (2) estimated abdominal flap volumes based on inset rates from bipedicled cases. Comparisons were stratified by BMI: < 23 and 23-25. RESULTS: A total of 177 patients were included. The estimated abdominal and LAP flap volumes were 695.0 and 486.6 cm3, respectively, both positively correlated with BMI. The LAP-to-abdominal flap volume ratio increased as BMI decreased. LAP flap volume exceeded 1.0 relative to 50% of abdominal volume in over 90% of cases, especially in the BMI < 23 group. In bipedicled DIEP flap cases, the average abdominal inset ratio was 0.84; accordingly, the adjusted LAP-to-abdominal flap volume ratio was 0.87 overall and 0.92 in the BMI < 23 group. CONCLUSIONS: The LAP flap volume was found to be comparable to that of the abdominal flap in a meaningful proportion of lean patients. These findings suggest it may serve as a reasonable alternative in cases requiring bilateral or bipedicled abdominal flap reconstruction. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE III: This journal requires that authors assign a level of evidence to each article. For a full description of these Evidence-Based Medicine ratings, please refer to the Table of Contents or the online Instructions to Authors www.springer.com/00266 .
Abstract sourced from PubMed (NCBI) for the cited record. See the original publication for the authoritative version.
Resumen
Peer-reviewed clinical and outcomes research relevant to medicinal leech therapy and its biology. Indexed in PubMed and verified against the NCBI record.
Por qué esto importa para la hirudoterapia
Este estudio retrospectivo de angiotomografía computarizada de 177 pacientes con IMC bajo comparó los volúmenes de los colgajos perforantes de la arteria lumbar (LAP) frente a los volúmenes de los colgajos abdominales (tipo DIEP) para la reconstrucción mamaria autóloga, determinando que el volumen del LAP es comparable en una proporción significativa de pacientes delgadas (relación ajustada LAP-abdominal de 0,87 en general, 0,92 en el grupo con IMC<23) y proponiendo el colgajo LAP como una alternativa razonable cuando el tejido abdominal es insuficiente. La relevancia para la hirudoterapia es indirecta pero real: la reconstrucción mamaria mediante colgajo libre perforante es precisamente el escenario quirúrgico en el que la congestión venosa posoperatoria puede amenazar la supervivencia del colgajo y se utilizan sanguijuelas medicinales de forma adyuvante para descomprimir un colgajo congestionado y ganar tiempo para que se restablezca el flujo venoso. La advertencia es que este artículo es puramente un estudio de viabilidad volumétrica/anatómica preoperatoria (Nivel de Evidencia III, retrospectivo) y no menciona nada sobre la congestión posoperatoria, el salvamento del colgajo o la terapia con sanguijuelas; es útil únicamente como antecedente sobre los procedimientos reconstructivos donde posteriormente podría considerarse el uso de sanguijuelas, no como evidencia sobre la terapia con sanguijuelas en sí misma.
Citación
Volumetric Feasibility of Lumbar Artery Perforator Flaps Compared to Abdominal Flaps for Breast Reconstruction in Low-BMI Patients: A CT-Based Study.
Kim et al. · Aesthetic plastic surgery, 2026
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Añadido a la biblioteca ASH: May 28, 2026 · Última actualización del sitio: June 18, 2026