Microsurgical reconstruction for traumatic hand defects in pediatric patients

Author:

Roh Si YoungORCID,Lee Jae YongORCID,Koh Sung HoonORCID,Kim Jin SooORCID,Lee Dong ChulORCID,Lee Kyung JinORCID

Abstract

Purpose: Microsurgery in pediatric patients remains challenging because of technical difficulties in small-vessel anastomosis and flap dissection. Few reports have focused exclusively on the microsurgical reconstruction of traumatic hand defects in children. Herein, we share our experience of posttraumatic hand reconstruction with free tissue transfer in pediatric patients and compare the treatment outcomes with adults.Methods: A single-institution retrospective review of trauma-induced microsurgical hand reconstruction cases was performed. Pediatric patients below 17 years old and adults who underwent microsurgical reconstruction of traumatic hand defects between 2011 and 2021 were included. Patient demographics, flap type, use of vein grafts, operative time, flap survival, and postoperative complications were documented. A subgroup analysis of patients younger than 8 years was also performed. Data of pediatric patients were statistically compared with those of adults who underwent free flap surgery using nearly identical surgical procedures by four senior surgeons at our medical center.Results: Forty-one flaps in 39 pediatric patients and 184 flaps in 184 adult patients were analyzed. Fasciocutaneous flaps were predominantly used in both groups. In pediatric patients, all flaps survived, while 170 adults (92.4%) survived. No statistically significant between-group differences in treatment outcomes were found. However, pediatric patients (22.0%) had significantly fewer secondary operations than adults (67.4%, p<0.001).Conclusion: Microsurgical reconstruction for trauma-induced hand defects in pediatric patients has a high success rate and low complication rate, just as with adults. Pediatric patients may be more resistant to partial necrotic flap changes, thereby requiring fewer secondary operations than adults.

Publisher

Korean Society for Surgery of the Hand

Subject

General Medicine

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