Circumferential Radical Debridement and Omental Free Flap in the Treatment of Severe Chronic Venous Ulcers

Chronic venous leg ulcers are a significant health care burden with a difficult and unreliable treatment. Free flaps may be needed for wound coverage in severe cases. Incomplete removal of dermatoliposclerosis (DLS) area and/or not addressing the underlying venous dysfunction may contribute to the r...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inAnnals of plastic surgery Vol. 90; no. 6; p. 568
Main Authors Cavadas, Pedro C, Padial, Beatriz
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.06.2023
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Summary:Chronic venous leg ulcers are a significant health care burden with a difficult and unreliable treatment. Free flaps may be needed for wound coverage in severe cases. Incomplete removal of dermatoliposclerosis (DLS) area and/or not addressing the underlying venous dysfunction may contribute to the reported modest long-term results. A series of 5 patients with severe chronic venous ulcers of the leg, resistant to conservative treatment and superficial venous surgery, were treated with radical, circumferential, subfascial resection of the DLS skin and coverage with omental free flaps. Delayed arteriovenous (AV) loops were used as recipients. All patients had previous superficial venous surgery and multiple skin grafts. Mean follow-up was 8 years (4-15 years). One hundred percent of flaps survived completely. No major complications occurred. One patient developed ulceration of the flap at 2 years and healed with basic wound care. At a mean follow-up of 8 years, all patients were ulcer-free. One patient died 15 years after the surgery for unrelated causes. Radical circumferential resection of DLS area in severe chronic venous leg ulcers and coverage with a free omental flap using staged AV loop provided durable coverage in a series of 5 patients. Complete resection of DLS area, addressing the underlying venous pathology, and draining the flap to a healthy competent vein graft (AV loop) may contribute to these favorable results.
ISSN:1536-3708
DOI:10.1097/SAP.0000000000003540