Scalp & Calvarial Reconstuction Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the vascular supply to the scalp

A
  1. Superficial temporal artery
  2. Occipital artery
  3. Supratrochlear
  4. Supraorbital
  5. Posterior auricular
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2
Q

Describe the anatomy of the STA

A
  • terminal branch of ECA
  • supplies largest territory on lateral scalp
  • becomes subcutaneous above tragus
  • travels within the TPF
  • divides into anterior and posterior branch 2cm above arch
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3
Q

Describe anatomy of occipital artery

A
  • branch of ECA
  • enters scalp 2cm from midline at superior nuchal line (occipital protruberance)
  • divides into medial and 2 lateral
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4
Q

Describe anatomy of STA and SOA

A
  • both branches of ICA, ophthalmic
  • STA located inline with medial canthus
  • SOA located inline with medial limbus
  • SOA exits SOforamen
  • both travels superficial to frontalis muscle
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5
Q

Describe anatomy of scalp and temporal region

A

Skin

Subcutaneous layer - cnotains vessels just above galea, nerves, lymphatic

Aponeurosis - Galea-frontalis-occipitalis-TPF

Loose areolar layer - contains emissary veins connecting to intracranial venous sinuses = becomes parotidomasseteric fascia

Pericranium - derives blood supply from middle meningeal and intracranial vessels = becomes deep temporal fascia

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6
Q

Describe the sensory innervation of the scalp

A

All 3 branches of trigeminal, cervical spine and plexus

1- V1 (Supraorbital) - deep branch pierces pericranium and travels laterally until 1cm medial to STline, it pierces galea and supply frontoparietal scalp

  • superficial branch pierces frontalis and supplies anterior forehead/hairline

2- V2 (Zygomaticotemporal) - temporal region

3- V3 (ATN) - temporal region

4- Greater and lesser occipital n - posterior scalp

5- Greater auricular n - posterior ear/lobule

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7
Q

Describe the cours eof the frontal branch

A
  • at level of Zarch, CN branch courses in loose areolar plane=parotidomasseteric fascia
  • continues to travel superficial and will be just below TPF/SMAS at 2cm above the arch
  • approaches frontalis and innervates from beneath muscle
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8
Q

Describe anatomic layers of calvarium

A
  • Outer table
  • Diploe
  • Inner table
  • Epidural space
  • dura mater
  • Subdural space

Note: Parietal and occipital bone is thickest, temporla thinnest

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9
Q

How do you classify scalp defects?

A
  • Congenital vs Acquired
  • Partial vs Full thickness
  • Size (subtotal vs total)
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10
Q

What is your DDX for a scalp defect?

A

Congenital

  1. Cutis Aplasia (absence of skin)
  2. Ectodermal Dysplasia (absence of hair/nail/teeth)
  3. Conjoined twins

Acquired

  1. Trauma
  2. Infection
  3. Burn
  4. Iatrogenic (Post-op post RTX)
  5. Androgenic alopecia
  6. Post skin cancer resection
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11
Q

Describe your goals of scalp reconstruction

A
  • debridement
  • maintain hairline
  • reconstruct like w like ie. hairbearing tissue
  • stable durable coverage of calvarium
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12
Q

Describe management of scalp defect according to size

A

<3cm : 1’ closure (with galea scoring as needed)

3-6cm : local flap (rotation, advancement, pin-wheel, 3rhomboid, bilobed, pinwheel, tissue expansion

6-10cm: large rotation flap, bucket handle, Orticochea 3flap, tissue expansion, subtotal scalp flap

>10cm : pericranial flap +STSG, free flap

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13
Q

Describe your management plan according to partial vs full thickness defect

A

PARTIAL

  • STSG and plan 2’ recon if hair missing

FULL THICKNESS

  1. Outer table removal and STSG
  2. Pericranial flap + STSG - flap based on named art
  3. Local flaps with galeal scoring
    1. pinwheel, 3adj. rhomboid, rotation (<6cm)
    2. Orticochea, bucket handle (6-10)
    3. Subtotal scalp flap rotation and graft donor (>10cm)
  4. Tissue Expansion then local flap
  5. Distant pedicled flap
  6. Microvascular flap
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14
Q

Describe the orticochea flap

A

Used for occipital defect

3 flaps are raised in subgaleal plane and scored

1 large + 2 smaller, where width of 2smaller is 1/2 that of 1’ defect

If defect lateral to midline, larger flap is based contralaterally

Not for vertex defects

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15
Q

Name distant pedicled flaps for scalp defect recon

A
  • pectoralis major (mastoid region defect)
  • trapezius (occipital region defect)
  • lat dorsi (temporal/periorbital
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16
Q

Name free flaps for scalp recon

A
  • Lat dorsi (for total scalp coverage)
  • Gracilis (for partial)
  • RFFF, ALT, Scapular
17
Q

Indications for free flap for scalp recon

A
  • ORN, post-op radiation planned
  • large malignancies
  • infection, osteomyelitis
18
Q

Describe principles of using tissue exmpanders for scalp recon

A
  • subgaleal placement
  • Incision placed away from defect and from future flap
  • flap length => 2x height
  • 2.5xSA of defect => base SA of expander
  • overexpand by 30-50%
19
Q

What are the subunits of the forehead

A

Central

Temporal

brow

20
Q

Describe your reconstructive ladder for forehead defect

A
  1. 1’ closure
  2. 2’ intention
  3. STSG + crane principle
  4. Local flaps (defect <1/3 of forehead) - incision along hairline
    1. central - advancement
    2. lateral
      1. Rotation (worthen)
      2. Rotation advancement (need backcut, along hairline)
      3. Rhomboid
  5. TIssue Expansion (defect >1/3 of forehead)
  6. Free flap (defect>1/2 of forehead)
  7. Integra and stsg (>1/2 of forehead)
21
Q

Describe the Juri flap

A
  • For anterior hairline defects
  • based on parietal (posterior branch) of STA
  • temporoparietal region flap - needs delay procedure to reduce risk of tip ncerosis and maintain length on narrow pedicle
22
Q

How do you classify cranium defects?

A

By location (prehairline, posthairline, supraorbital brow)

By defect composition (FT, bone only)

23
Q

WHat are surgical pricniples for cranioplasty

A
  • adequate debridement
  • water tight dural repair
  • obliteration of dead space
  • tension free closure of vascularized tissue
  • preserve hair bearing tissue
  • stable soft tissue coverage
24
Q

What are options for calvarial reconstruction

A
  1. Autogenous material
    1. Split calvarium
    2. Split rib
  2. Alloplastic material
    1. Titanium
    2. PMMA (methyl methacrylate)
    3. PEEK (polyetherether ketone)
    4. Hydroxyapatite cement
    5. MEDPOR (porous polyethylene)
25
Q

Describe the adv and disadv of titanium material for cranioplasty

A

*need 1cm overlap on edges beyond defect for fixation

ADVANTAGE

  • inert
  • CT less artifact, MRI ok
  • no FB reaction
  • can integrate with bone

DISADVANTAGE

  • higher infx rate compared to autologus recon
  • conducts heat/cold
26
Q

Describe the adv and disadv of PMMA material for cranioplasty

A

PMMA - methylmethacrylate, can be porous

ADVANTAGE

  • customized
  • radiolucent
  • no heat conduction

DISADVANTAGE

  • exothermic rxn - can cause heat injury
  • risk of infx
27
Q

Describe the adv and disadv of PEEK material for cranioplasty

A

Polyether ether ketone

ADVANTAGE

  • customized
  • radiolucent

DISADVANTAGE

  • not pliable - palpable edges
  • non porous
28
Q

Describe the adv and disadv of MEDPOR material for cranioplasty

A

Porous polyethylene

ADVANTAGE

  • pliable
  • customized

DISADVANTAGE

  • susceptible to infx due to porosity
29
Q

Describe the adv and disadv of hydroxyapetite material for cranioplasty

A

HExagonal form of CaPO4 - can cover titanium mesh????

ADVATNGES
- contours, resorbable??

DISADVANTAGES

  • brittle
30
Q

What are complications of cranioplasty?

A

Flap loss

CSF leak

Wound infection/abscess

Meningitis/encaphalitis

31
Q

List the ways to identify the main trunk of facial nerve in total parotidectomy?

A

1- tympanomasoid suture: points to the stylomastoid foramen = exit point of the main trunk of the facial nerve. Main trunk is founfd 8mm below TM suture exiting styloid foramen

2- Trace nerve branches distal to proximal

3- Tragal pointer: 1cm inferior, anterior and deep to tragal pointer, finds “pes anserinus”

4- posterior belly of digastric: trunk lies 1cm deep to the insertion point og posterior belly of digastric