fter pedicled and free flap reconstruction, postoperative complication rates exceed 25 percent, most commonly including infection, necrosis, and wound dehiscence. 1,2 Because of these complications, vascular surgical delay has emerged as a technique that involves partial elevation to invoke local ischemia of a target tissue through multiple incisions that disrupt the vascular network and induce remodeling. Remodeling mechanisms include alterations in sympathetic tone, structural vasodilation, reorientation of choke vessels, and changes in tissue metabolism. [3][4][5][6][7][8][9] The delay procedure causes a hypoxia-induced increase in flap blood flow, inducing chronic