J Reconstr Microsurg 1989; 5(4): 343-347
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-1006884
ORIGINAL ARTICLE

© 1989 by Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc.

The Effect of Acute Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy on Axial Pattern Skin Flap Survival when Administered During and after Total Ischemia

William A. Zamboni, Allan C. Roth, Robert C. Russell, Paul M. Nemiroff, Laurie Casas, E. Clyde Smoot
  • Department of Surgery, Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Southern Illinois University School of Medicine, Springfield, Illinois
Further Information

Publication History

Accepted for publication 1989

Publication Date:
08 March 2008 (online)

ABSTRACT

The effect of hyperbaric oxygen (HBO) on axial pattern skin flap survival in male Wistar rats, when administered during and immediately following prolonged total flap ischemia, was evaluated. Eighty-one 3 × 6 cm rectangular epigastric skin flaps were elevated, and the inferior epigastric pedicle of each flap occluded for 8 hr. The animals were divided into a control and three other experimental groups: Control (n = 27)-8 hr flap ischemia, no HBO; Group 1 (n = 21) - HBO therapy (100 percent O2-three 1.75 hr dives at 2.5 atm) during ischemia; Group 2 (n = 21) - HBO therapy (two 1.75 hr dives) following ischemia; Group 3 (n = 12) - HBO treatment during ischemia but with the flap contained in a metal-coated Mylar bag to prevent oxygen diffusion. The percentage of flap necrosis was calculated on postoperative day 6.

Mean flap necrosis for controls was 28 percent (± 21 S.D.), while HBO treatment during ischemia or during reperfusion significantly reduced this necrosis to 9 percent (± 11) and 12 percent (± 14), respectively (p < 0.01). The percentage of necrosis for Group 3, with the local effect of HBO on the flap blocked by the diffusion barrier, was 5 percent (± 7), also significantly better than the controls (p < 0.0005) but no different from the other two experimental groups.

HBO treatment increases the percentage of axial pattern skin flap survival when administered during or immediately following total flap ischemia. The improved flap survival appears to be a systemic and not a local effect.

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