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Volume 54, Issue 1, Pages 62-66 (January 2001)


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The short head of the biceps femoris as a monitor for the free lateral thigh flap in pharyngoesophageal reconstruction

MD Hun Gon Kim (Resident)**, MD, PhD Bomjoon Ha (Assistant Professor)**Corresponding Author Information, MD Young Jin Park (Clinical Fellow)**, MD Won Sok Hyon (Clinical Fellow)**, MD Jae Joong Kim (Assistant Professor)**, MD, PhD Myoung Soo Shin (Associate Professor and Chairman)**, MD, PhD Chung-Hwan Baek (Associate Professor)*

Received 30 November 1999; accepted 11 September 2000.

Summary 

Free flaps are frequently used to reconstruct the defect following radical resection of pharyngoesophageal malignancy but postoperative monitoring of buried flaps is difficult. We have designed a monitoring-muscle flap using the short head of the biceps femoris muscle when using a free lateral thigh flap. The third and fourth perforators of the profunda femoris artery, the main vascular pedicle of the lateral thigh flap, pass through the short head of the biceps femoris. Partial excision of the short head of the biceps femoris muscle does not result in any functional disturbance of the leg, and the viability of the buried lateral thigh flap can be monitored by observing the exposed muscle through a small window in the neck. Between April and October 1998 five patients underwent pharyngoesophageal reconstruction by this method. The short head of the biceps femoris was used to monitor the main flap in three patients and to obliterate the dead space after neck dissection in two patients. There were no recipient-site complications such as fistula or infection and no disturbance of thigh function.

Published online 9 November 2000

No full text is available. To read the body of this article, please view the PDF online.

** Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Samsung Medical Centre, 50 Il Won Dong, Kang Nam Ku, Seoul135-710, South Korea

* Department of Otorhinolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Samsung Medical Centre, 50 Il Won Dong, Kang Nam Ku, Seoul 135-710, South Korea

Corresponding Author InformationCorrespondence to Bomjoon Ha.

PII: S0007-1226(00)93459-3

doi:10.1054/bjps.2000.3459


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