Composite grafts are excellent options for treating external nasal deformities because they provide support and include the skin, which improves the delicate anatomy of the nose. However, they are constrained by size limits since the grafts rely on blood flow to the nasal bed. This is a critical issue when the recipient sites have scarring or degenerative diseases. A novel stair-step incision was made to produce a graft bed with a blood supply and to maximize the use of nonvascularized composite grafts. Instead of making a full-thickness defect through the skin envelope and lining, we placed individual incisions and connected them via a subcutaneous dissection. By dividing the defect into 2 layers, the graft bed was produced and the risk of fistula was reduced. From 2009 to 2020, we satisfactorily conducted 3 cases of nasal reconstruction with a stair-step incision followed by a composite tissue graft. One patient was a girl, and 2 were men. Their ages ranged from 11 to 44 years. The largest graft was 24 × 24 mm in size. No complications were observed. The stair-step incision method for nasal reconstruction can eliminate the limitations of composite grafts and maximize improvements through a simple procedure. This makes composite grafts safer in cases with poor vascularity, enables larger composite grafts to survive, and lowers the risk of fistula formation by avoiding full-thickness defects.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/SCS.0000000000009476 | DOI Listing |
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