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Dermal Perfusion of Common Donor Sites Free Flaps in Chronic Smokers and Nonsmokers

Objective: The smoking behavior of the patient influences the indication of plastic surgeon in his reconstruction procedure on the assumption that smoking may increase the complication risks. In the present study, we evaluate the particular aspect of topographic differences in dermal perfusion in ch...

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Autores principales: Rahmanian-Schwarz, Afshin, Molnar, Viktor, H.-O., Rennekampff, Gonser, Phillipp, Willkomm, Lina, Amr, Amro, Held, Manuel, Schaller, Hans-Eberhard, Bernhard, Hirt
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Open Science Company, LLC 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3243457/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22220217
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author Rahmanian-Schwarz, Afshin
Molnar, Viktor
H.-O., Rennekampff
Gonser, Phillipp
Willkomm, Lina
Amr, Amro
Held, Manuel
Schaller, Hans-Eberhard
Bernhard, Hirt
author_facet Rahmanian-Schwarz, Afshin
Molnar, Viktor
H.-O., Rennekampff
Gonser, Phillipp
Willkomm, Lina
Amr, Amro
Held, Manuel
Schaller, Hans-Eberhard
Bernhard, Hirt
author_sort Rahmanian-Schwarz, Afshin
collection PubMed
description Objective: The smoking behavior of the patient influences the indication of plastic surgeon in his reconstruction procedure on the assumption that smoking may increase the complication risks. In the present study, we evaluate the particular aspect of topographic differences in dermal perfusion in chronic smokers and nonsmokers. Methods: The perfusion parameter of 8 common donor sites for free flap transplantation were investigated in 152 smoking and nonsmoking subjects (n = 152; women: n = 78, 51%; men: n = 74, 49%; smokers: n = 38, 25%; nonsmokers: n = 114, 75%) using the O2C device (LAE Medizintechnik Giessen GmbH, Gießen, Germany). Oxygen saturation (%), relative hemoglobin concentration (AU [arbitrary unit]), Velocity (AU) and Flow (AU) were monitored noninvasively and compared. Results: All monitored regions did not show any significant differences in parameters oxygen saturation (smokers = 40%, nonsmokers = 44.5%), relative hemoglobin concentration (smokers = 60 AU, nonsmokers = 60 AU), flow (smokers = 19.5 AU, nonsmokers = 16.5 AU) and velocity (smokers = 10 AU, nonsmokers = 10 AU) between chronic smoking and nonsmoking subjects (P < .05). Also, a distinction between smokers and nonsmokers as a function of gender (women: n = 78, 51%; men: n = 74, 49%) showed no significant differences in all 4 parameters. Conclusions: Varied statements regarding surgical complications in chronic and acute smokers were described in the literature. This raises the question of how far restricting the indication of reconstruction procedure for smoking patients due to higher complications is justified. In our study, there is no significant drop of dermal perfusion parameters after chronic tobacco consumption. Nonetheless, the unfavorable effects of smoking in general to human body and health remain undoubted.
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spelling pubmed-32434572012-01-04 Dermal Perfusion of Common Donor Sites Free Flaps in Chronic Smokers and Nonsmokers Rahmanian-Schwarz, Afshin Molnar, Viktor H.-O., Rennekampff Gonser, Phillipp Willkomm, Lina Amr, Amro Held, Manuel Schaller, Hans-Eberhard Bernhard, Hirt Eplasty Journal Article Objective: The smoking behavior of the patient influences the indication of plastic surgeon in his reconstruction procedure on the assumption that smoking may increase the complication risks. In the present study, we evaluate the particular aspect of topographic differences in dermal perfusion in chronic smokers and nonsmokers. Methods: The perfusion parameter of 8 common donor sites for free flap transplantation were investigated in 152 smoking and nonsmoking subjects (n = 152; women: n = 78, 51%; men: n = 74, 49%; smokers: n = 38, 25%; nonsmokers: n = 114, 75%) using the O2C device (LAE Medizintechnik Giessen GmbH, Gießen, Germany). Oxygen saturation (%), relative hemoglobin concentration (AU [arbitrary unit]), Velocity (AU) and Flow (AU) were monitored noninvasively and compared. Results: All monitored regions did not show any significant differences in parameters oxygen saturation (smokers = 40%, nonsmokers = 44.5%), relative hemoglobin concentration (smokers = 60 AU, nonsmokers = 60 AU), flow (smokers = 19.5 AU, nonsmokers = 16.5 AU) and velocity (smokers = 10 AU, nonsmokers = 10 AU) between chronic smoking and nonsmoking subjects (P < .05). Also, a distinction between smokers and nonsmokers as a function of gender (women: n = 78, 51%; men: n = 74, 49%) showed no significant differences in all 4 parameters. Conclusions: Varied statements regarding surgical complications in chronic and acute smokers were described in the literature. This raises the question of how far restricting the indication of reconstruction procedure for smoking patients due to higher complications is justified. In our study, there is no significant drop of dermal perfusion parameters after chronic tobacco consumption. Nonetheless, the unfavorable effects of smoking in general to human body and health remain undoubted. Open Science Company, LLC 2011-12-19 /pmc/articles/PMC3243457/ /pubmed/22220217 Text en Copyright © 2011 The Author(s) http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ This is an open-access article whereby the authors retain copyright of the work. The article is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Journal Article
Rahmanian-Schwarz, Afshin
Molnar, Viktor
H.-O., Rennekampff
Gonser, Phillipp
Willkomm, Lina
Amr, Amro
Held, Manuel
Schaller, Hans-Eberhard
Bernhard, Hirt
Dermal Perfusion of Common Donor Sites Free Flaps in Chronic Smokers and Nonsmokers
title Dermal Perfusion of Common Donor Sites Free Flaps in Chronic Smokers and Nonsmokers
title_full Dermal Perfusion of Common Donor Sites Free Flaps in Chronic Smokers and Nonsmokers
title_fullStr Dermal Perfusion of Common Donor Sites Free Flaps in Chronic Smokers and Nonsmokers
title_full_unstemmed Dermal Perfusion of Common Donor Sites Free Flaps in Chronic Smokers and Nonsmokers
title_short Dermal Perfusion of Common Donor Sites Free Flaps in Chronic Smokers and Nonsmokers
title_sort dermal perfusion of common donor sites free flaps in chronic smokers and nonsmokers
topic Journal Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3243457/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22220217
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