Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3997376 Revista Colombiana de Cancerología 2009 6 Pages PDF
Abstract
The major challenge for surgeons subsequent to lesion resection is the closure of defects, especially those on the face and neck. We profile an 83 year-old patient with a primary squamous cell lesion on neck skin that had evolved over 3 years. Following surgical resection of the tumor and posterolateral ganglion dissection, surgical defect reconstruction consisted of a fasciocutaneous supraclavicular artery island flap with primary closure of the donor zone. Despite neck dissection, it was possible to preserve the pedicle of the transverse cervical artery-a feat some authors consider to be impossible. Postoperative recovery was satisfactory and pathology results revealed tumor free margins. As a result of several such successful flap surgeries, it is recommended that this procedure be used for the reconstruction of side effects subsequent to resection of neck skin tumors.
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