Lingual Artery as the Recipient Vessel of Choice in Patients Requiring a Second or Third Free Flap in Recurrent Oral Cancers and Vessel-Depleted Neck: A 5-Year Experience in a Single Institute

Reconstruction with free flaps becomes a challenge in recurrent cases having previously treated necks, in patients who have received prior radiation therapy or chemotherapy or both, and where the patient has already undergone free flap reconstruction in a prior surgery. Depleted cervical recipient v...

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Published inIndian journal of plastic surgery Vol. 56; no. 6; pp. 494 - 498
Main Authors Dhondge, Rajendra, Hussain, Mohsina, Singh, Archana, Nagarkar, Raj
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Germany Thieme Medical and Scientific Publishers Pvt. Ltd 01.12.2023
Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc
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Summary:Reconstruction with free flaps becomes a challenge in recurrent cases having previously treated necks, in patients who have received prior radiation therapy or chemotherapy or both, and where the patient has already undergone free flap reconstruction in a prior surgery. Depleted cervical recipient vessels can increase the complexity of reconstruction in achieving successful free flap prefusion and thereby increasing flap thrombosis and eventually failure.  Over a period of 5 years from January 2018 to February 2023, we encountered a total of 22 cases of recurrent or second primary oral cancer with bilateral necks operated, postadjuvant chemo-radiotherapy, and requiring a second or third free flap reconstruction. In most of the cases we resorted to the lingual artery as the recipient artery of choice.  No flap loss was reported. No cases were reexplored either for hematoma or for congestion. All patients recovered uneventfully.  To the best of our knowledge, there has been no paper yet that focuses on the lingual artery to be the recipient vessel of choice in recurrent oral cancers. We find the lingual artery to be a reliable and safe option and advocate its usage as recipient vessel of choice in recurrent oral cancers requiring more than one free flap reconstruction.
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ISSN:0970-0358
1998-376X
DOI:10.1055/s-0043-1776899