首页|Reconstructive surgery

Reconstructive surgery

扫码查看
Tracheoesophageal fistula results in persistent leakage of saliva into the trachea, prevents oral feeding, and predisposes to aspiration pneumonia. Large fistula closure may require a free flap to cover the defect. When the defect involves the tracheal area between the neck and the mediastinum, a tubeless field for optimal exposure can be advantageous. This article reports the use of veno-venous extracorporeal lung support, a known safe and efficient technique to support the patient???s respiratory function, for this purpose. The typical veno-venous extracorporeal lung support setting includes a femoro-jugular bypass. The patient cases reported here had characteristics that precluded the use of the jugular vein, such as neck radiation dermatitis, previous radical neck dissection, and poor accessibility. Therefore a more rarely described femoro-femoral approach was used. The cases of three patients with persistent tracheoesophageal fistula who had free flap surgeries (two bi-paddled radial forearm free flap and one latissimus dorsi muscle free flap) assisted by femoro-femoral veno-venous extracorporeal lung support are reported.

extracorporeal membrane oxyge-nationfree flaptracheoesophageal fistulatrachea

Fuchsmann, C.、Philouze, P.、Bauer, C.、Jacquenod, P.

展开 >

Serv Chirurg ORL,Hosp Civils Lyon

Serv Anesthesie Reanimat,Hosp Civils Lyon

2022

International journal of oral and maxillofacial surgery

International journal of oral and maxillofacial surgery

SCI
ISSN:0901-5027
年,卷(期):2022.51(7)
  • 3