In the treatment of head and neck carcinoma involving the carotid artery, resection of the carotid artery and direct reconstruction using a vein graft has commonly been employed to reduce the incidence of cerebral ischemic complications. But the procedure of carotid grafting itself carries the risk of preventing complete tumor clearance. And contamination due to salivary fistula, particularly in cases of meso or hypopharyngeal carcinoma, may result in graft rupture or thrombosis. To overcome these difficulties, the authors have developed a new surgical procedure, namely, a contralateral external carotid-middle cerebral artery bypass operation. This bypass system is designed at directly supplying the cerebral hemisphere on the carotid ligation side through a vein graft running entirely outside the cervical operative field. The vein graft is anastomosed end-to side to the external carotid artery of the opposite side. Then it is placed subcutaneously in front of the auricle, above the zygomatic arch, frontal subgaleal space and anastomosed end-to-side to the recipient artery, the ascending branch of the middle cerebral artery, in the Broca area of the carotid ligation side. The neck is incised almost the same manner as in parotidectomy, with a slightly longer cervical extension, and the scalp by bilateral coronal incision of Sutta. A frontotemporal osteoplastic craniotomy of the involved side is performed. The length of the saphenous vein used is about 50cm. This surgical procedure requires no transient internal or external shunt. The common carotid artery can be ligated safely after confirming good post-anastomotic bypass flow using an electro-magnetic blood flow meter.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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