“…When properly executed, the cervicofacial and cervicothoracic flaps meet these criteria, and they are capable of providing soft tissue coverage for protection of deeper vital structures such as the facial nerve, mandible, and carotid artery. 10 In our series, as in others, cheek and periorbital defects arising from the extirpation of malignant skin lesions, deeply invasive buccal mucosal lesions, perineural spread from skin malignancies, scar excisions, and traumatic wounds provide indications for cervicofacial rotation flaps, with gradual inferior extension onto the chest wall if additional rotation is needed. Also, defects of the anterolateral neck skin because of fungating primary parotid tumors, metastatic lymph node disease in the parotid or cervical nodes, and radiation damage were readily reconstructed in our series with cervicothoracic rotation flaps.…”