Litcius/Paper detail

The Historical Role of the Plastic Surgeon in Spine Reconstruction

Annie Do, Matthew J. Davis, Amjed Abu‐Ghname, Sebastian Winocour, Edward M. Reece, Scott Holmes, David S. Xu, Alexander E. Ropper, Scott L. Hansen

2021Seminars in Plastic Surgery11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Wound complications occur in up to 19% of patients undergoing complex spine surgery. The role of the plastic surgeon in complex and redo spine surgery is important and evolving. Classically, plastic surgeons have been involved in the management of patients who develop wound complications following surgery. This involves reconstruction of posterior trunk defects with locoregional fasciocutaneous, muscle, and free tissue transfers. There has also been an increasing role for plastic surgeons to become involved in prophylactic closures of complex and/or redo spine surgeries for high-risk populations. Identification of patients with comorbidities and likelihood for multiple reoperations who are prophylactically treated with complex closure with or without local muscle flaps could significantly decrease the postoperative wound complications.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineSPINE (molecular biology)OrthodonticsBioinformaticsBiologyHistory of Medical PracticeMedical History and InnovationsMusculoskeletal Disorders and Rehabilitation