A 3-mm surgical margin can be safely used for nonmorpheaform basal cell carcinoma to attain 95 percent cure rates for lesions 2 cm or smaller. A positive pathologic margin has an average recurrence rate of 27 percent.
The selection of recipient vessels that are suitable for microvascular anastomosis in the head and neck region is one of many components that is essential for successful free tissue transfer. The purpose of this study was to evaluate a set of factors that are related to the recipient artery and vein and to determine how these factors influence flap survival. A retrospective review of 102 patients over a 5-year consecutive period was completed. Indications for microvascular reconstruction included tumor ablation (n = 76), trauma (n = 13), and chronic wounds or facial paralysis (n = 13). The most frequently used recipient artery and vein included the facial, superficial temporal, superior thyroid, carotid, and jugular. Various factors that were related to the recipient vessels were analyzed and included patient age, recipient artery and vein, diabetes mellitus, tobacco use, the timing of reconstruction, the method of anastomosis, previous radiation therapy, creation of an arteriovenous loop, and use of an interposition vein graft. Successful free tissue transfer was obtained in 97 of 102 flaps (95%). Flap failure was the result of venous thrombosis in 4 and arterial thrombosis in 1. Statistical analysis demonstrated that anastomotic failure was associated with an arteriovenous loop (2 of 5, P = 0.03) and tobacco use (3 of 5, P = 0.03). Flap failure was not related to patient age, choice of recipient vessel, diabetes mellitus, previous irradiation, the method of arterial or venous anastomosis, use of an interposition vein graft, or the timing of reconstruction.
The purpose of this study was to demonstrate the feasibility of using a fibrin glue polymer to produce injectable tissue-engineered cartilage and to determine the optimal fibrinogen and chondrocyte concentrations required to produce solid, homogeneous cartilage. The most favorable fibrinogen concentration was determined by measuring the rate of degradation of fibrin glue using varying concentrations of purified porcine fibrinogen. The fibrinogen was mixed with thrombin (50 U/cc in 40 mM calcium chloride) to produce fibrin glue. Swine chondrocytes were then suspended in the fibrinogen before the addition of thrombin. The chondrocyte/polymer constructs were injected into the subcutaneous tissue of nude mice using chondrocyte concentrations of 10, 25, and 40 million chondrocytes/cc of polymer (0.4-cc injections). At 6 and 12 weeks, the neocartilage was harvested and analyzed by histology, mass, glycosaminoglycan content, DNA content, and collagen type II content. Control groups consisted of nude mice injected with fibrin glue alone (without chondrocytes) and a separate group injected with chondrocytes suspended in saline only (40 million cells/cc in saline; 0.4-cc injections). The fibrinogen concentration with the most favorable rate of degradation was 80 mg/cc. Histologic analysis of the neocartilage showed solid, homogeneous cartilage when using 40 million chondrocytes/cc, both at 6 and 12 weeks. The 10 and 25 million chondrocytes/cc samples showed areas of cartilage separated by areas of remnant fibrin glue. The mass of the samples ranged from 0.07 to 0.12 g at 6 weeks and decreased only slightly by week 12. The glycosaminoglycan content ranged from 2.3 to 9.4 percent for all samples; normal cartilage controls had a content of 7.0 percent. DNA content ranged from 0.63 to 1.4 percent for all samples, with normal pig cartilage having a mean DNA content of 0.285 percent. The samples of fibrin glue alone produced no cartilage, and the chondrocytes alone produced neocartilage samples with a significantly smaller mass (0.47 g at 6 weeks and 0.46 g at 12 weeks) when compared with all samples produced from chondrocytes suspended in fibrin glue (p < 0.03). Gel electrophoreses demonstrated the presence of type II collagen in all sample groups. This study demonstrates that fibrin glue is a suitable polymer for the formation of injectable tissue-engineered cartilage in the nude mouse model. Forty million chondrocytes per cc yielded the best quality cartilage at 6 and 12 weeks when analyzed by histology and content of DNA, glycosaminoglycan, and type II collagen.
Commercially available human acellular dermal matrix (HADM), AlloDerm((R)), was implanted as an interpositional graft in the abdominal wall of adult vervet monkeys. Host response to implanted HADM was evaluated and compared with a human cellular dermal matrix (HCDM) and a primate acellular dermal matrix (PADM). Clinical acceptance of the acellular grafts (HADM and PADM) and graft remodeling were evidenced by fibroblast repopulation and neoangiogenesis. A mild inflammatory response marked predominantly by macrophages and T-cells was present in both HADM and PADM during the first month but was absent by 3 months. Similarly, antibody and complement deposition into the grafts as well as in the serum was evident only at the early time points. Interleukin-6 (IL-6) or IL-10 was induced in some acellular graft-implanted monkeys at the early time points, but tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma), or IL-2 was not detected over the study period. In contrast, significant inflammation was observed in HCDM-implanted animals, as evidenced by immune cell infiltration (p = 0.0001), immunoglobulin G (IgG) binding (p < 0.001), complement (C5b) deposition (p < 0.05), TNF-alpha deposition (p < 0.001), and macrophage activation (p < 0.05). Abdominal wall repair in the vervet monkey is an immunologically relevant model to evaluate functional efficacy and host immune response to implanted biomaterials and may be predictive of clinical response and surgical outcomes in humans.
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