Background: Plastic surgery training is undergoing major changes however there is paucity of data detailing the current state of training as perceived by plastic surgical trainees. Our aim was to determine the quality of training as perceived by the current trainee pool and their future plans.
Methods: A 25-item anonymous survey with three discrete sections (demographics, quality of training, and post-graduate career plans) was developed and distributed to plastic surgery residents during the academic year 2013.
The development of a fistula between the tracheobronchial tree and oesophagus due to nonmalignant causes is uncommon. Division of the fistula with muscle flap interposition eliminates contact between the tracheobronchial segment and the oesophagus, theoretically decreasing the chance of recurrence as well as providing a robust blood supply to aid in healing. The split latissimus dorsi muscle flap is a well-suited flap for such repairs because of the ability to simultaneously cover two separate apertures (tracheobronchial and oesophageal).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA case of a left small finger tumour that was diagnosed on histopathological review as Nora's lesion (bizarre parosteal osteochondromatous proliferation) is reported. There have been fewer than 150 cases reported in the literature to date and its pathophysiology is yet to be defined. Due to its rare presentation, Nora's lesion can easily go unrecognized and therefore inappropriately managed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The authors' goal was to demonstrate a technique of gaining added width from the right pectoralis major muscle flap through muscle fascia release, with the hope of attaining sturdier, tension-free dead space closure of the debrided mediastinum in cases of mediastinitis.
Methods: The authors measured the preincisional and postincisional widths of the right pectoralis major flap following release of the fascia in nine patients who underwent mediastinal reconstruction using pectoralis major muscle flaps from 2002 to 2004 at the Detroit Medical Center.
Results: The average width of the nine muscles was 16.
Background: The authors' goal was to determine whether the bacteria cultured from the mediastinal deep soft tissues matched those identified by the sternal bone cultures in cases of mediastinitis with clinically suspected sternal osteomyelitis, in hopes of eliminating the need for sternal bone biopsy.
Methods: The authors retrospectively reviewed the charts of 27 Detroit Medical Center patients who underwent median sternotomy and developed mediastinitis with clinical suspicion of osteomyelitis between 1996 and 2004.
Results: Although only 18 of 27 of the authors' patients had positive bone cultures, they demonstrate that in 94 percent (17 of 18) of these patients, the organisms cultured from the mediastinal deep soft-tissue cultures matched those cultured from the positive sternal bone cultures.
A case of fulminant dissecting cellulitis of the scalp in a fifteen-year-old African American male is reported. The presentation was refractory to standard medical treatment such that treatment required radical subgaleal excision of the entire hair-bearing scalp. Reconstruction was in the form of split-thickness skin grafting at the level of the pericranium following several days of vacuum-assisted closure dressing to promote an acceptable wound bed for skin grafting and to ensure appropriate clearance of infection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIsolated injury to the radial or ulnar artery results in no significant complications in patients who undergo repair or ligation of the injured artery. However, ligation of both infrabrachial vessels of the upper extremity is associated with limb loss from ischemia due to lack of collateral circulation. A rare case of acute ligation of both the radial and ulnar arteries in a drug abuser where collateral vessels preserved the circulation to the hand is reported.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAcute compression of the median nerve in the forearm usually occurs from compartment syndrome. A case of acute compression neuropathy of the median nerve from a foreign body, where there was no evidence of compartment syndrome, is reported. The diagnosis was made from the patient's symptoms and radiographs.
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