Searched for: Department/Unit:Plastic Surgery
Cephalometric analysis for mandibular surgery: Part III [Case Report]
Zide B; Grayson B; McCarthy JG
PMID: 7053505
ISSN: 0032-1052
CID: 50610
Paralysis of the mandibular branch of the facial nerve
Conley J; Baker DC; Selfe RW
A direct and simple operation of transfer of the anterior belly of the digastric muscle with its attached tendon is presented. It was carried out in 36 patients, with three minor complications. It has proved effective in paralysis of the mandibular division of the facial nerve as a primary or secondary procedure. In ablative resections where this branch of the nerve is intentionally sacrificed, it is advised to do the muscle and tendon transfer as part of the primary operation. In aesthetic operations or where the status of the nerve (post-operatively) is not specifically know, it is advised to wait for spontaneous return for an interval of 3 to 6 months. If the improvement is not satisfactory, then this technique may be considered
PMID: 7122746
ISSN: 0032-1052
CID: 51110
Plastic surgery symposium in China [Letter]
McCarthy, J G; Shaw, W W
PMID: 7053507
ISSN: 0032-1052
CID: 99068
Extramammary Paget's disease [Case Report]
Pitman, G H; McCarthy, J G; Perzin, K H; Herter, F P
Extramammary Paget's disease is an in situ skin and mucosal carcinoma frequently associated with and probably arising in a subjacent or regionally proximate carcinoma. Microscopic spread of tumor cells almost always extends beyond clinically apparent disease. Surgical treatment requires carefully planned, systematic excision under precise histologic control. An ideal treatment method remains to be developed. Inadequate excision usually results in recurrences that can be successfully treated by reexcision. Associated invasive carcinomas occur frequently, and mortality is high in these patients
PMID: 6275432
ISSN: 0032-1052
CID: 99067
Experimental human skin allografts, the hla complex, and a Nobel prize
Converse, J M
PMID: 7048372
ISSN: 0032-1052
CID: 119877
Critical closing pressure, local perfusion pressure, and the failing skin flap
Cutting, C; Ballantyne, D; Shaw, W; Converse, J M
A simple apparatus was devised to perfuse the rat groin flap to study the relationship between perfusion pressure and flow. Results demonstrate that a relatively high intraarterial pressure must be applied to this skin flap before blood flow will commence. Results suggest that this critical closing phenomenon is the result of surface tension, blood rheology, venous pressure, tissue pressure, and vascular smooth muscle tone. Correlating the experiments of Milton and Landis reveals that, beyond a certain distance, local perfusion pressure in a skin flap gradually decreases with increasing distance from the flap base. These observations suggest that the perfusion boundary in a skin flap forms at the point where perfusion pressure has fallen to the level of the critical closing pressure. Methods of increasing survival length of a flap by decreasing critical closing pressure are discussed. The effects of edema and pressure dressings on flap and replant survival are examined in terms of the closing pressure concept
PMID: 7114760
ISSN: 0148-7043
CID: 119878
Resection of a giant ossifying fibroma through an intraoral approach in a 9-year-old child: immediate reconstruction and 6-year cephalometric follow-up
Converse, J M; Coccaro, P J; Valauri, A J
An unusual opportunity was afforded to study the growth and development of the facial structures of a 9-year-old child who underwent major mandibular reconstruction. The longitudinal studies confirmed the present concepts of the factors responsible for mandibular growth as well as their repercussions on other facial structures. An intraoral subperiosteal resection of a major portion of the right hemimandible sparing the upper part of the mandibular ramus was required to eradicate a large ossifying fibroma. An iliac bone graft consisting of the outer table of cortical bone and cancellous bone was placed within the mucoperiosteal sac to repair the defect. It also was used to control the ramus remnant. The patient was followed for 6 years. The growth of the reconstructed mandible was in effect nearly symmetrical with the unaffected contralateral portion of the mandible, resulting in minimal facial asymmetry. The mucoperiosteum provided a vascular bed for the bone graft and the buccal sulcus was preserved, thus providing a retentive ridge and sulcus for a denture without the need to perform a skin or mucosal graft inlay procedure. The symmetrical growth of the mandible is attributed to the growth of the ramus by remodeling, resorption, deposition, and relocation and by the muscle-bone interface (the functional matrix)
PMID: 7038732
ISSN: 0032-1052
CID: 119879
Organization for upper limb reattachment surgery
Burton, R; Beasley, R; Omer, G; Meyer, V
PMID: 7322519
ISSN: 0030-5898
CID: 3694172
Anatomy of rhytidectomy
Baker, Daniel C.; Rees, Thomas D
[Chicago] : Plastic Surgery Educational Foundation, [1981]
Extent: 1 videocassette (45 min.) : sd., col. ; 3/4 in.
ISBN: n/a
CID: 703472
Muscle flap blepharoplasty
Rees, Thomas D
[Chicago] : Plastic Surgery Educational Foundation, [1981]
Extent: 1 videocassette (26 min.) : sd., col. ; 3/4 in.
ISBN: n/a
CID: 703482