-
Rhamises Ragpa and Reynavel E. Ciballos are now friends 3 years ago
Getaprofessor Site Visits
- 246,839 visits
Latest updates
Because of the controversy surrounding the use of interposition vein grafts in free tissue reconstruction, Lai et al. (2021) prepared a study that illustrates the indications, procedures, safety, and results for head and neck microvascular surgery. These microvascular techniques have been linked to significant defects in head and neck reconstruction.
Free tissue transfer is currently largely regarded as the preferred strategy for reconstructing complex cases. For effective free flap repair, we require a suitable recipient vessel. When there aren’t enough healthy recipient vessels, however, difficulties emerge. As a result, vein grafting is required to lengthen free flap pedicles and link them to suitable recipient vessels.
The participants in this study were twenty-six patients who had interposition vein grafting and free tissue transfer at the same time. The total free flap survival rates for vein and non-vein grafts were 92.3 % and 95.1 %, respectively, according to the findings.
This demonstrates the reliability of vein grafts in difficult head and neck surgeries, particularly in salvage situations and patients with numerous reconstructions. This is encouraging news for patients who need head and neck reconstruction, particularly those who have had tumor recurrence.There has been an error processing your requestThere has been an error processing your request
Epithelial Tissue – YouTube
My illustration of the cell
IMG_2968.jpg – Google DriveIMG_2968.jpg – Google Drive
Will the Covid Vaccines Stop Omicron? Scientists Are Racing to Find Out. – The New York TimesA “Frankenstein mix” of mutations raises concerns, but the variant may remain vulnerable to current vaccines. If not, revisions will be necessary.
COVID-19 vaccines now required for employees doing on-site work in PHMalacañang says unvaccinated employees may not be terminated but shall be required to undergo regular RT-PCR testing, or antigen tests, at their own expense