Computed Tomographic Angiography Perforator Localization for Virtual Surgical Planning of Osteocutaneous Fibular Free Flaps in Head and Neck Reconstruction.

J Oral Maxillofac Surg

Assistant Professor of Surgery and Program Director, Division of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Department of Surgery, Mayo Clinic and Mayo College of Medicine, Rochester, MN.

Published: October 2018

Virtual surgical planning (VSP), computer-aided design and computer-aided modeling, and 3-dimensional printing are 3 distinct technologies that have become increasingly employed in head and neck oncology and microvascular reconstruction. Although each of these technologies have long been utilized for treatment planning in other surgical disciplines such as craniofacial surgery, trauma surgery, temporomandibular joint surgery, and orthognathic surgery, its widespread use in head and neck reconstructive surgery remains a much more recent advent. In response to the growing trend of VSP being used for the planning of fibular free flaps in head and neck reconstruction, some surgeons have questioned the technology's implementation based upon its perceived inadequacy in addressing other reconstructive considerations beyond hard tissue anatomy. Detractors of VSP for head and neck reconstruction highlight its lack of capability in accounting for multiple reconstructive factors, such as recipient vessel selection, vascular pedicle reach, need for dead space obliteration, and skin paddle perforator location. It is with this premise in mind that we report a simple technique for anatomically localizing peroneal artery perforators during VSP for osteocutaneous fibular free flaps in which both bone and a soft tissue skin paddle are required for ablative reconstruction. The technique allows for anatomic perforator localization during the VSP session based solely upon data existent within the preoperative computed tomographic angiography (CTA) and it does not require any modifications to preoperative clinical workflows. It is the authors' presumption that many surgeons in the field are unaware of this planning capability within the context of modern VSP for head and neck reconstruction. The primary purpose of this manuscript is to introduce and further familiarize surgeons with the technique of CTA perforator localization as a method of improving intraoperative fidelity for VSP of osteocutaneous fibular free flaps.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.joms.2018.04.002DOI Listing

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