“…The midline forehead flap with tunnelled deepithelialized pedicle is easily dissected. However, its use is also associated with bulging of the nasal radix, and a long vertical midline scar, even when primary closure of the donor is feasible [8]. The use of a forehead muscle flap in combination with a skin graft has also been reported, but the use of the skin graft is associated with aesthetically inferior results and potential nerve damage [9].…”
This journal requires that authors assign a level of evidence to each article. For a full description of these Evidence-Based Medicine ratings, please refer to the Table of Contents or the online Instructions to Authors www.springer.com/00266 .
“…The midline forehead flap with tunnelled deepithelialized pedicle is easily dissected. However, its use is also associated with bulging of the nasal radix, and a long vertical midline scar, even when primary closure of the donor is feasible [8]. The use of a forehead muscle flap in combination with a skin graft has also been reported, but the use of the skin graft is associated with aesthetically inferior results and potential nerve damage [9].…”
This journal requires that authors assign a level of evidence to each article. For a full description of these Evidence-Based Medicine ratings, please refer to the Table of Contents or the online Instructions to Authors www.springer.com/00266 .
“…It is an axial patterned fl ap based on the supratrochlear artery 6 . Blood supply is so reliable that a narrow pedicle can nourish a relatively large fl ap 7 . The main disadvantage is the thickness of the fl ap, so that debulking and thinning may be necessary, which implies a risk of jeopardizing the vascularity and subsequent fl ap failure.…”
“…It is most commonly too thick to give a perfect result, and web deformation is mentioned as a potential risk. 4 Mombaerts et al 5 described a tunnelled transposition flap from the paramedial forehead, a technique surely useful in extended defects but probably not necessary for smaller defects. A hatched flap from the glabella might be a possible solution.…”
This flap is not mentioned in textbooks in reference to the reconstruction of canthal lesions and its value for this particular location is probably underestimated.
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