Twelve patients with complete thumb amputations were analyzed to determine the interrelations between thermoregulation for pain and cold intolerance and sensory nerve recovery. Patients were examined at 3 months, 6 months, 1 year, and after 2 years following replantation. Medical thermography was introduced to assess postoperative circulation following digital replantation, while vasomotor tone was assessed by cold-stress plethysmography testing. Postoperative circulation was divided into two different patterns based upon skin temperature, the transition of which over time correlated well with sensory nerve recovery. Patients with cold intolerance showed a persistent vasoconstriction pattern, the cold change of which was objectively detected by thermography.
After microsurgical suturing, the wound healing process at the rat femoral artery anastomosis was studied with scanning electron microscopy. The re-endothelialization was divided into four successive stages, based on the development of a fibrin network and the rate of endothelial regrowth. Within 5 minutes of blood flow re-establishment the fibrin network formation started to cover the wound surface; it was completed by the 3rd or 4th day. The endothelial recovery started on the 2nd day and continued to the base of the suture by the 6th day. Re-endothelialization from the wound edge, which was formed between intact and injured endothelium toward the suture-restrained site, was a two-fold process: initially, a single endothelial film covered the anastomosis site, then, the singled endothelial sheet proliferated and thickened to complete the endothelialization. A better understanding of the stages involved in microvascular repair is beneficial in evaluating vascular recovery and its relationship to patency rates in microvascular surgery.
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