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KMID : 1143020210260040285
Archives of Hand and Microsurgery
2021 Volume.26 No. 4 p.285 ~ p.292
Hemodynamic Principles in Free Tissue Transfer: Vascular Changes at the Anastomosis Site
Doh Gyeong-Hyeon

Kim Bum-Sik
Lee Dong-Yun
Yoon Jung-Soo
Lim Soo-A
Han Yea-Sik
Eo Su-Rak
Abstract
Purpose: Various factors such as blood velocity, turbulent flow, and intimal injury are the most basic elements in free tissue transfers. However, how blood flow is reestablished, maintained, and changed after vascular anastomosis has rarely been studied.

Methods: A 54-year-old male sustained an unreplantable severe crushing injury to his right hand. The middle finger was transferred to the thumb as an ectopic replantation using an anastomosis between the radial and digital arteries. However, secondary reconstruction for the first web space defect was inevitable and an anteromedial thigh free flap procedure was performed 2 months later using the previously anastomosed vessels. During the procedures, we noted morphologic changes in the microvessels and tried to explain those phenomena by applying the principles of hemodynamics.

Results: ue to the discrepancy in vascular size between the radial and digital arteries, the velocity of the blood flow in the post-anastomotic site, which was the digital artery, must have been increased by Poiseuille¡¯s law. Supposing that the velocity through the post-anastomotic site of the digital artery was increased, the pressure exerted by that flow decreased, resulting in more shrinkage of the vessel lumen of the digital artery by Bernoulli¡¯s principle. Pascal¡¯s law could also be applied in confined spaces with a static flow; where there is a constant pressure, as the radius of the post-anastomotic digital artery diminishes, the tension within the digital artery¡¯s wall also simultaneously decreases. By Laplace¡¯s law, the post-anastomotic digital artery¡¯s wall thickens as less tension is exerted on the wall.

Conclusion: Understanding these simple flow mechanics will enable microsurgeons to better avoid the risk factors causing thrombosis, which is related to flap failure.
KEYWORD
Hemodynamics, Free tissue flaps, Surgical anastomosis, Blood flow velocity, Blood flow pressure
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