Donor Limb Functional Restoration via a Novel Clinical Care Pathway following Fibula Free Flap Harvest for Head and Neck Reconstruction

Author:

Halfpap Joshua P.1,Hammer Daniel A.2,Kingsbury Trevor D.3,Ortiz-Pomales Yan T.4,O’Reilly Eamon B.4,Pontillo Marisa35

Affiliation:

1. Doctor of Physical Therapy Program, College of Health and Human Services, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, Ohio

2. Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Naval Medical Center San Diego, San Diego, Calif.

3. Department of Physical and Occupational Therapy, Chiropractic Services, and Sports Medicine, Naval Medical Center San Diego, San Diego, Calif.

4. Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Naval Medical Center San Diego, San Diego, Calif.

5. Extremity Trauma and Amputation Center of Excellence, Defense Health Agency, Falls Church, Va.

Abstract

Summary: Patients undergoing head and neck skeletal reconstruction (HNR) often require free tissue transfer from the extremities to ensure proper restoration of form and function. This requires a team-based, highly reliable medical system centered around the patient needs. Surgical intervention across multiple sites and harvesting of donor tissue results in short- and long-term physical impairments. There is a paucity of research objectively measuring impairments resulting from the graft donor site. There is a lack of research that objectively measures impairments and protocols for the management of these patients postoperatively. Patients undergo little, if any, formal approach to dealing with the vast impairments, which are sequelae to this surgery. This leads to large discrepancies in proposed functional progressions, return to duty timelines, and utilization of rehabilitative resources. At a major military medical center, an innovative clinical care pathway for patients undergoing HNR using free tissue transfer was implemented using a multidisciplinary model that focuses on early engagement with rehabilitation. This model, paired with a single surgery, will attempt to return service members to duty months earlier than the traditional approach. This report describes the conceptual framework and implementation of a new criteria-based, multidisciplinary clinical care pathway for HNR patients. The collaboration amongst the multidisciplinary care team has optimized the holistic health of the patient and communication with their support network, yielding faster return to normalization of daily life activities. The long-term goal is to further develop and formalize this pathway to best serve this patient population.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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