1.Reconstruction of whole hand degloving injury by transfer of nerved tissue flaps in staged surgery: 5 cases report
Kelie WANG ; Shiyu ZOU ; Chunsheng XIAO ; Pinkun CHEN ; Yizhi ZHANG ; Lifeng MA ; Yanjun YANG ; Ziqing ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Microsurgery 2025;48(1):31-38
Objective:To explore the feasibility and effect on the reconstruction of whole hand degloving injury by transfer of nerved tissue flaps in staged surgery.Methods:A retrospective study was conducted on the clinical data of 5 patients who suffered whole hand degloving injury and underwent staged reconstructive surgery with nerved tissue flaps, from December 2018 to December 2022 in the Department of Hand Surgery, Longgang Orthopaedics Hospital of Shenzhen. The patients were 4 males and 1 female, aged 22-45 years. Two of the whole-hand degloved injuries were left hands and 3 of right. Two patients had the whole-hand degloving injury combined with a fracture of distal phalangeal tuberosity, and 1 was complicated with partial rupture of the extensor tendon insertion. Areas of the whole hand degloving injury ranged from 215 cm 2 to 480 cm 2, the size of the hallux nail flaps for reconstruction of thumbs ranged from 54 cm 2 to 104 cm 2, the size of the hallux nail flaps for reconstruction of index fingers ranged from 65 cm 2 to 133 cm 2, and the size of the flaps for reconstruction of all the defects of hands ranged from 119 cm 2 to 255 cm 2. In primary surgery, the thumbs, index fingers and the first webs were reconstructed with bilateral hallux nail flaps to shape the appearance and gain the sensation function. Meanwhile, a single and large defect was created from the defects of hand by bundling up the middle, ring and little fingers together with the all the defects in both palmar and dorsal hand. Then an anterolateral thigh flap (ALTF) was used to have the created single defect wrapped together. Donor sites of the bilateral hallux nail flap were reconstructed with a lobulated ALTF from the other side or with bilateral peroneal artery perforator flaps. Donor sites of the ALTF and peroneal artery perforator flap were pulled and sutured. After the hallux nail flaps and ALTFs of the affected hands had survived and stabilised, multiple staged surgery were then carried out to firstly reconstruct the ring and little fingers, and followed by the middle and ring fingers in turns from the artificial syndactyly created in the primary surgery. In the final stage of surgery, skin of the radial side of middle and ring finger-pulps and the ulnar little finger-pulp were replaced by lateral toe flaps to reconstruct the sensations of the main sensory zones of middle, ring and little finger-pulps. Thereafter, the shape, TPD and finger extension and flexions were observed and evaluated through the postoperative follow-up, at the outpatient clinic according to the Evaluation Standard of Thumb and Finger Reconstruction Function of the Hand Surgery Society of the Chinese Medical Association. The appearance and function of the donor sites in both feet were evaluated with the Maryland foot score. Results:All flaps survived after surgery. Postoperative follow-up lasted up to 14 to 48 months after the last surgery. The appearance of fingers was satisfactory with good function. TPD of thumbs and index finger-pulps had achieved up to 6-8 mm, and 3-8 mm in the main sensory zones of middle, ring and little finger-pulps. TPD in the non-major sensory zones of middle, ring and little finger-pulps was found at 10-14 mm, which scored 13 to 14 and rated as excellent according to the Evaluation Standard of Thumb and Finger Reconstruction Function of the Hand Surgery Society of the Chinese Medical Association. Only a linear scar left in the donor site of thigh. As the appearance of the flaps on the feet was not bloated and there was no obvious abnormality in walking and running, therefore the function of feet scored up to 96 to 97 and rated excellent according to the Maryland foot score.Conclusion:A multi-staged reconstruction of a whole hand degloving injury with nerved tissue flaps not only achieves satisfactory digital and hand appearance, but also with good function. There is no obvious effect on the appearance and function of the donor sites. This surgical strategy is novel in the reconstruction of a whole hand degloving injury.
2.Supercharged venous drainage technique is applied to a reversed fascial pedicled island flap in reconstruction of finger pulp defect
Yizhi ZHANG ; Ziqing ZHANG ; Pinkun CHEN ; Shiyu ZOU ; Kelie WANG
Chinese Journal of Microsurgery 2025;48(3):298-302
Objective:To evaluate the clinical efficacy and feasibility of the reversed fascial pedicled island flap with supercharged venous drainage in reconstruction of finger pulp defects.Methods:A retrospective study was conducted between June 2021 and October 2024 at the Department of Hand Surgery, the Eighth People's Hospital of Longgang District of Shenzhen, to evaluate 76 patients (76 digits) who had finger pulp defects and were treated by the reversed fascial pedicled island flap incorporating supercharged venous drainage. The patients were 62 males and 14 females, aged 12-66 (mean 29) years. All patients presented with pulp defects only (0.8 cm×1.2 cm - 1.9 cm×4.3 cm) without fracture or tendon injury. The surgical procedure involved a harvest of flap (1.0 cm×1.4 cm - 1.9 cm×4.5 cm in size) with 1-2 proximal veins and had the redundant veins ligated. Micro-anastomosis was performed between the veins carried by flap and the veins at recipient site. Donor sites were closed primarily or reconstructed with full-thickness skin grafting. Postoperative follow-ups were conducted through outpatient clinic and WeChat, including the evaluations of flap viability using the late-term hand flap evaluation criteria, the flap cold tolerance with the Cold Intolerance Symptom Severity (CISS) questionnaire and the digital motion with the Total Active Movement (TAM) system of the Evaluation Trial Standards of Replantation Functional of Hand Surgery of Chinese Medical Association.Results:All 76 flaps achieved complete survival without complication such as an arterial and venous compromise or an infection, except 1 flap that developed a local blister but it healed after dressing changes and removal of sutures. Over the 2 to 32 (mean 6) months of postoperative follow-up, outcomes of surgery were assessed. Sixty-seven flaps were rated as excellent and 9 as good based on the overall condition of the flap in this group. Cold tolerance was excellent for 65 flaps, good for 10 flaps and fair for 1 flap according CISS. Digital function evaluated by the TAM system showed 63 flaps of excellent, 10 of good and 3 of fair. All skin grafts at the donor sites survived well and in good appearance, without obvious depigmentation or pigmentation.Conclusion:Application of a revered fascial pedicled island flap with venous supercharging in reconstruction of finger pulp defect significantly enhances venous outflow, thereby it reduces postoperative complications such as venous occlusion, flap congestion and blistering.
3.Comparative study on clinical effect of medial plantar venous flap and lateral toe flap on reconstruction of defect of digit-pulps
Shiyu ZOU ; Kelie WANG ; Haiqian LING ; Chunsheng XIAO ; Yizhi ZHANG ; Lifeng MA ; Zirong HUANG ; Weimin ZHU
Chinese Journal of Microsurgery 2025;48(5):492-499
Objective:To systematically compares the medial plantar venous flap (MPVF) and the lateral toe flap (LTF) reconstruction of digit-pulp defect, aiming to establish whether there exist significant differences between the 2 flaps in flap survival rate, two-point discrimination (TPD), score of Vancouver Scar Scale (VSS) and score of digit-pulp defect reconstruction evaluation.Methods:With a prospective cohort design, this study enrolled 36 patients who were admitted in Department of Hand Surgery, Longgang Eighth People's Hospital of Shenzhen for digit-pulp defects with bone or tendon exposure between January 2024 and September 2024. According to the random grouping method, participants were divided into 2 groups. The MPVF group comprised 18 patients (21 digits) of 13 males (15 digits) and 5 females (6 digits), aged 13-58 (mean 44±12) years. The MPVF group included 9 left and 12 right digits, with distribution as follows: 2 thumbs, 5 index fingers, 7 middle fingers, 5 ring fingers and 2 little fingers. The soft tissue defect area ranged from 2.0 cm × 1.0 cm to 9.2 cm × 3.3 cm (mean 6.69 cm 2± 6.69 cm 2). Flap dimensions ranged from 2.1 cm×1.1 cm to 9.5 cm×3.5 cm (mean 7.54 cm 2±7.22 cm 2). Donor sites were closed primarily or by full-thickness skin grafts harvested from the leg. The LTF group included 18 patients (21 digits) of 15 males (17 digits) and 3 females (4 digits), aged 22-62 (mean 41±12) years. The affected digits in LTF group comprised 12 left and 9 right digits, with a distribution of: 3 thumbs, 9 index fingers, 5 middle fingers, 2 ring fingers and 2 little fingers. The area of soft tissue defect ranges from 1.4 cm × 1.0 cm to 3.9 cm × 1.8 cm (mean 3.93 cm 2± 1.80 cm 2). Flap dimensions ranged from 1.5 cm×1.2 cm to 4.0 cm×1.9 cm (mean 4.52 cm 2±1.89 cm 2). Donor sites were closed primarily, or by full-thickness skin grafts harvested through extension of proximal wound extension or from calf for defect coverage. Patients were contacted for postoperative follow-up by telephone or WeChat to arrange a visit of outpatient clinic or a home visit by surgeon. Statistical analysis was conducted to compare the 2 groups regarding: gender, age and flap dimensions, flap survival rate at 2 weeks after surgery and TPD of flaps, VSS scores, and digit-pulp defect reconstruction evaluation scale scores at 4 months and 6 months postoperatively. P<0.05 indicates a statistically significant difference. Results:The comparative analysis revealed no statistically significant differences between 2 groups in baseline characteristics: gender distribution ( χ2=0.53, P=0.47), mean age ( t=0.75, P=0.46), flap dimensions ( t=1.86, P=0.08), confirming a demographic and surgical parameter equivalence in subsequent outcome comparisons ( P>0.05). All flaps survived at 2 weeks after surgery. All skin grafts at donor sites demonstrated complete viability with uneventful primary wound healing. At 4 months after surgey, the TPD in the MPVF group were 14.71 mm±1.90 mm and 7.81 mm±1.78 mm, respectively, compared to 14.48 mm±1.57 mm and 7.67 mm±1.39 mm in the LTF group at 6 months after surgery. The VSS scores were 1.67±1.11 and 1.29±0.72 for MPVF versus 1.86±1.15 and 1.38±0.81 for LTF at corresponding time points. The digit-pulp defects reconstruction evaluation scale scores showed 88.43±2.62 and 91.43±3.59 for MPVF versus 88.19±2.70 and 91.19±3.50 for LTF. Statistical analysis revealed no significant differences (all P>0.05) at 2 postoperative time points. Conclusion:The MPVF demonstrated non-inferior clinical efficacy to the LTF in reconstruction of digit-pulp defects, with comparable outcomes in flap survival rate at 2 weeks, and in TPD, VSS scores, digit-pulp defect reconstruction evaluation scale scores at 4 months and at 6 month after surgey.
4.Expert Consensus on Optimisation of Emergency Management Procedure for Hand Injury in Microsurgery (2025)
Ziqing ZHANG ; Jianxi HOU ; Kelie WANG ; Jian QI ; Rongfeng ZHANG ; Dong HUANG ; Xiaoju ZHENG ; Muwei LI ; Qiqiang DONG ; Xianyou ZHENG ; Shuqiang XIE ; Qiao HOU ; Gangyi LIU ; Jian LIN ; Jihui JU ; Huaqiao WANG ; Liqiang GU
Chinese Journal of Microsurgery 2025;48(4):361-372
Standardised emergency management protocols for hand injury in microsurgery is critical, as it directly determines ultimate clinical outcomes. This consensus consolidates expert insights regarding diagnostic and treatment procedure for hand injury in microsurgery, emergency support protocols and key points of emergency workflow optimisation. It summarises the opinions of experts and puts forward standardised recommendations to guide clinical practice in microsurgical treatment process, so as to further improve the quality of treatment for hand injury in microsurgery and maximise the protection of limb function and quality of life of patients.
5.Reconstruction of whole hand degloving injury by transfer of nerved tissue flaps in staged surgery: 5 cases report
Kelie WANG ; Shiyu ZOU ; Chunsheng XIAO ; Pinkun CHEN ; Yizhi ZHANG ; Lifeng MA ; Yanjun YANG ; Ziqing ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Microsurgery 2025;48(1):31-38
Objective:To explore the feasibility and effect on the reconstruction of whole hand degloving injury by transfer of nerved tissue flaps in staged surgery.Methods:A retrospective study was conducted on the clinical data of 5 patients who suffered whole hand degloving injury and underwent staged reconstructive surgery with nerved tissue flaps, from December 2018 to December 2022 in the Department of Hand Surgery, Longgang Orthopaedics Hospital of Shenzhen. The patients were 4 males and 1 female, aged 22-45 years. Two of the whole-hand degloved injuries were left hands and 3 of right. Two patients had the whole-hand degloving injury combined with a fracture of distal phalangeal tuberosity, and 1 was complicated with partial rupture of the extensor tendon insertion. Areas of the whole hand degloving injury ranged from 215 cm 2 to 480 cm 2, the size of the hallux nail flaps for reconstruction of thumbs ranged from 54 cm 2 to 104 cm 2, the size of the hallux nail flaps for reconstruction of index fingers ranged from 65 cm 2 to 133 cm 2, and the size of the flaps for reconstruction of all the defects of hands ranged from 119 cm 2 to 255 cm 2. In primary surgery, the thumbs, index fingers and the first webs were reconstructed with bilateral hallux nail flaps to shape the appearance and gain the sensation function. Meanwhile, a single and large defect was created from the defects of hand by bundling up the middle, ring and little fingers together with the all the defects in both palmar and dorsal hand. Then an anterolateral thigh flap (ALTF) was used to have the created single defect wrapped together. Donor sites of the bilateral hallux nail flap were reconstructed with a lobulated ALTF from the other side or with bilateral peroneal artery perforator flaps. Donor sites of the ALTF and peroneal artery perforator flap were pulled and sutured. After the hallux nail flaps and ALTFs of the affected hands had survived and stabilised, multiple staged surgery were then carried out to firstly reconstruct the ring and little fingers, and followed by the middle and ring fingers in turns from the artificial syndactyly created in the primary surgery. In the final stage of surgery, skin of the radial side of middle and ring finger-pulps and the ulnar little finger-pulp were replaced by lateral toe flaps to reconstruct the sensations of the main sensory zones of middle, ring and little finger-pulps. Thereafter, the shape, TPD and finger extension and flexions were observed and evaluated through the postoperative follow-up, at the outpatient clinic according to the Evaluation Standard of Thumb and Finger Reconstruction Function of the Hand Surgery Society of the Chinese Medical Association. The appearance and function of the donor sites in both feet were evaluated with the Maryland foot score. Results:All flaps survived after surgery. Postoperative follow-up lasted up to 14 to 48 months after the last surgery. The appearance of fingers was satisfactory with good function. TPD of thumbs and index finger-pulps had achieved up to 6-8 mm, and 3-8 mm in the main sensory zones of middle, ring and little finger-pulps. TPD in the non-major sensory zones of middle, ring and little finger-pulps was found at 10-14 mm, which scored 13 to 14 and rated as excellent according to the Evaluation Standard of Thumb and Finger Reconstruction Function of the Hand Surgery Society of the Chinese Medical Association. Only a linear scar left in the donor site of thigh. As the appearance of the flaps on the feet was not bloated and there was no obvious abnormality in walking and running, therefore the function of feet scored up to 96 to 97 and rated excellent according to the Maryland foot score.Conclusion:A multi-staged reconstruction of a whole hand degloving injury with nerved tissue flaps not only achieves satisfactory digital and hand appearance, but also with good function. There is no obvious effect on the appearance and function of the donor sites. This surgical strategy is novel in the reconstruction of a whole hand degloving injury.
6.Supercharged venous drainage technique is applied to a reversed fascial pedicled island flap in reconstruction of finger pulp defect
Yizhi ZHANG ; Ziqing ZHANG ; Pinkun CHEN ; Shiyu ZOU ; Kelie WANG
Chinese Journal of Microsurgery 2025;48(3):298-302
Objective:To evaluate the clinical efficacy and feasibility of the reversed fascial pedicled island flap with supercharged venous drainage in reconstruction of finger pulp defects.Methods:A retrospective study was conducted between June 2021 and October 2024 at the Department of Hand Surgery, the Eighth People's Hospital of Longgang District of Shenzhen, to evaluate 76 patients (76 digits) who had finger pulp defects and were treated by the reversed fascial pedicled island flap incorporating supercharged venous drainage. The patients were 62 males and 14 females, aged 12-66 (mean 29) years. All patients presented with pulp defects only (0.8 cm×1.2 cm - 1.9 cm×4.3 cm) without fracture or tendon injury. The surgical procedure involved a harvest of flap (1.0 cm×1.4 cm - 1.9 cm×4.5 cm in size) with 1-2 proximal veins and had the redundant veins ligated. Micro-anastomosis was performed between the veins carried by flap and the veins at recipient site. Donor sites were closed primarily or reconstructed with full-thickness skin grafting. Postoperative follow-ups were conducted through outpatient clinic and WeChat, including the evaluations of flap viability using the late-term hand flap evaluation criteria, the flap cold tolerance with the Cold Intolerance Symptom Severity (CISS) questionnaire and the digital motion with the Total Active Movement (TAM) system of the Evaluation Trial Standards of Replantation Functional of Hand Surgery of Chinese Medical Association.Results:All 76 flaps achieved complete survival without complication such as an arterial and venous compromise or an infection, except 1 flap that developed a local blister but it healed after dressing changes and removal of sutures. Over the 2 to 32 (mean 6) months of postoperative follow-up, outcomes of surgery were assessed. Sixty-seven flaps were rated as excellent and 9 as good based on the overall condition of the flap in this group. Cold tolerance was excellent for 65 flaps, good for 10 flaps and fair for 1 flap according CISS. Digital function evaluated by the TAM system showed 63 flaps of excellent, 10 of good and 3 of fair. All skin grafts at the donor sites survived well and in good appearance, without obvious depigmentation or pigmentation.Conclusion:Application of a revered fascial pedicled island flap with venous supercharging in reconstruction of finger pulp defect significantly enhances venous outflow, thereby it reduces postoperative complications such as venous occlusion, flap congestion and blistering.
7.Comparative study on clinical effect of medial plantar venous flap and lateral toe flap on reconstruction of defect of digit-pulps
Shiyu ZOU ; Kelie WANG ; Haiqian LING ; Chunsheng XIAO ; Yizhi ZHANG ; Lifeng MA ; Zirong HUANG ; Weimin ZHU
Chinese Journal of Microsurgery 2025;48(5):492-499
Objective:To systematically compares the medial plantar venous flap (MPVF) and the lateral toe flap (LTF) reconstruction of digit-pulp defect, aiming to establish whether there exist significant differences between the 2 flaps in flap survival rate, two-point discrimination (TPD), score of Vancouver Scar Scale (VSS) and score of digit-pulp defect reconstruction evaluation.Methods:With a prospective cohort design, this study enrolled 36 patients who were admitted in Department of Hand Surgery, Longgang Eighth People's Hospital of Shenzhen for digit-pulp defects with bone or tendon exposure between January 2024 and September 2024. According to the random grouping method, participants were divided into 2 groups. The MPVF group comprised 18 patients (21 digits) of 13 males (15 digits) and 5 females (6 digits), aged 13-58 (mean 44±12) years. The MPVF group included 9 left and 12 right digits, with distribution as follows: 2 thumbs, 5 index fingers, 7 middle fingers, 5 ring fingers and 2 little fingers. The soft tissue defect area ranged from 2.0 cm × 1.0 cm to 9.2 cm × 3.3 cm (mean 6.69 cm 2± 6.69 cm 2). Flap dimensions ranged from 2.1 cm×1.1 cm to 9.5 cm×3.5 cm (mean 7.54 cm 2±7.22 cm 2). Donor sites were closed primarily or by full-thickness skin grafts harvested from the leg. The LTF group included 18 patients (21 digits) of 15 males (17 digits) and 3 females (4 digits), aged 22-62 (mean 41±12) years. The affected digits in LTF group comprised 12 left and 9 right digits, with a distribution of: 3 thumbs, 9 index fingers, 5 middle fingers, 2 ring fingers and 2 little fingers. The area of soft tissue defect ranges from 1.4 cm × 1.0 cm to 3.9 cm × 1.8 cm (mean 3.93 cm 2± 1.80 cm 2). Flap dimensions ranged from 1.5 cm×1.2 cm to 4.0 cm×1.9 cm (mean 4.52 cm 2±1.89 cm 2). Donor sites were closed primarily, or by full-thickness skin grafts harvested through extension of proximal wound extension or from calf for defect coverage. Patients were contacted for postoperative follow-up by telephone or WeChat to arrange a visit of outpatient clinic or a home visit by surgeon. Statistical analysis was conducted to compare the 2 groups regarding: gender, age and flap dimensions, flap survival rate at 2 weeks after surgery and TPD of flaps, VSS scores, and digit-pulp defect reconstruction evaluation scale scores at 4 months and 6 months postoperatively. P<0.05 indicates a statistically significant difference. Results:The comparative analysis revealed no statistically significant differences between 2 groups in baseline characteristics: gender distribution ( χ2=0.53, P=0.47), mean age ( t=0.75, P=0.46), flap dimensions ( t=1.86, P=0.08), confirming a demographic and surgical parameter equivalence in subsequent outcome comparisons ( P>0.05). All flaps survived at 2 weeks after surgery. All skin grafts at donor sites demonstrated complete viability with uneventful primary wound healing. At 4 months after surgey, the TPD in the MPVF group were 14.71 mm±1.90 mm and 7.81 mm±1.78 mm, respectively, compared to 14.48 mm±1.57 mm and 7.67 mm±1.39 mm in the LTF group at 6 months after surgery. The VSS scores were 1.67±1.11 and 1.29±0.72 for MPVF versus 1.86±1.15 and 1.38±0.81 for LTF at corresponding time points. The digit-pulp defects reconstruction evaluation scale scores showed 88.43±2.62 and 91.43±3.59 for MPVF versus 88.19±2.70 and 91.19±3.50 for LTF. Statistical analysis revealed no significant differences (all P>0.05) at 2 postoperative time points. Conclusion:The MPVF demonstrated non-inferior clinical efficacy to the LTF in reconstruction of digit-pulp defects, with comparable outcomes in flap survival rate at 2 weeks, and in TPD, VSS scores, digit-pulp defect reconstruction evaluation scale scores at 4 months and at 6 month after surgey.
8.Expert Consensus on Optimisation of Emergency Management Procedure for Hand Injury in Microsurgery (2025)
Ziqing ZHANG ; Jianxi HOU ; Kelie WANG ; Jian QI ; Rongfeng ZHANG ; Dong HUANG ; Xiaoju ZHENG ; Muwei LI ; Qiqiang DONG ; Xianyou ZHENG ; Shuqiang XIE ; Qiao HOU ; Gangyi LIU ; Jian LIN ; Jihui JU ; Huaqiao WANG ; Liqiang GU
Chinese Journal of Microsurgery 2025;48(4):361-372
Standardised emergency management protocols for hand injury in microsurgery is critical, as it directly determines ultimate clinical outcomes. This consensus consolidates expert insights regarding diagnostic and treatment procedure for hand injury in microsurgery, emergency support protocols and key points of emergency workflow optimisation. It summarises the opinions of experts and puts forward standardised recommendations to guide clinical practice in microsurgical treatment process, so as to further improve the quality of treatment for hand injury in microsurgery and maximise the protection of limb function and quality of life of patients.
9.Phased reconstruction of a whole-hand degloving injury with tissue flaps carrying nerves: a case report
Lizhen DAI ; Shiyu ZOU ; Yizhi ZHANG ; Pinkun CHEN ; Chunsheng XIAO ; Lifeng MA ; Kelie WANG
Chinese Journal of Microsurgery 2024;47(6):694-697
In December 2018, a 21-year old male with a whole-hand degloving injury was treated in the Department of Hand Surgery, Longgang District Orthopaedic Hospital. Two hallux nail flaps were used to reconstruct the right thumb, index finger and the first web. The wounds on middle, ring and little fingers were reconstructed with syndactyly by a left anterolateral thigh flap (ALTF). A right ALTF was used to reconstruct the donor sites in both feet. After 2 surgeries for finger splitting, the pulps of right middle, ring and little fingers were reconstructed with the pulps of the right middle, ring and little fingers together with the lateral flaps of the second toes of both feet and left third toe. After 4 years of follow-up, nails of the thumb and index finger were realistic and the shape of the fingers was satisfactory. There was no wear or ulceration in the finger pulps. The holding function was good with the TPD at 4-6 mm. There was no blisters or ulcers in both feet. The flap was soft. Only linear scars remained on both thighs.
10.Phased reconstruction of a whole-hand degloving injury with tissue flaps carrying nerves: a case report
Lizhen DAI ; Shiyu ZOU ; Yizhi ZHANG ; Pinkun CHEN ; Chunsheng XIAO ; Lifeng MA ; Kelie WANG
Chinese Journal of Microsurgery 2024;47(6):694-697
In December 2018, a 21-year old male with a whole-hand degloving injury was treated in the Department of Hand Surgery, Longgang District Orthopaedic Hospital. Two hallux nail flaps were used to reconstruct the right thumb, index finger and the first web. The wounds on middle, ring and little fingers were reconstructed with syndactyly by a left anterolateral thigh flap (ALTF). A right ALTF was used to reconstruct the donor sites in both feet. After 2 surgeries for finger splitting, the pulps of right middle, ring and little fingers were reconstructed with the pulps of the right middle, ring and little fingers together with the lateral flaps of the second toes of both feet and left third toe. After 4 years of follow-up, nails of the thumb and index finger were realistic and the shape of the fingers was satisfactory. There was no wear or ulceration in the finger pulps. The holding function was good with the TPD at 4-6 mm. There was no blisters or ulcers in both feet. The flap was soft. Only linear scars remained on both thighs.

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