Skin flap surgery is a critical procedure for treating severe skin injury in which post-surgery lesions must well monitored and cared for noninvasively. In the present study, attempts using high-frequency ultrasound imaging, quantitative parameters, and statistical analysis were made to extensively assess variations in the skin flap. Experiments were arranged by incising the dorsal skin of rats to create a skin flap using the chamber model. Measurements, including photographs, 30 MHz ultrasound B-mode images, skin thickness, echogenicity, Nakagami statistics, and histological analysis of post-surgery skin flap, were performed. Photograph results showed that color variations in different parts of the skin flap may readily correspond to ischemic states of local tissues. Compared to post-surgery skin flap on day 7, both integrated backscatter (IB) and Nakagami parameter (m) of the distal part of tissues were increased, and those of the skin thickness were decreased. Overall, relative skin thickness, IB, and m of the distal part of post-surgery skin flap varied from 100 to 67%, −66 to −61 dB, and 0.48 to 0.36, respectively. These results demonstrate that this modality and quantitative parameters can be feasibly applied for long-term and in situ assessment of skin flap tissues.