An Experimental and Clinical Study of Flap Monitoring with an Analysis of the Clinical Course of the Flap Using an Infrared Thermal Camera
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Rat Models
2.3. Patients
2.4. Infrared Thermal Imaging
2.5. Infrared Thermal Image Analysis
2.6. Statistical Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Rat Models
3.2. Patients
3.2.1. Patient Demographics and Flap Characteristics
3.2.2. Infrared Thermal Imaging Analysis
3.2.3. Case of Non-Necrosis Group (Case #7 and Case #13)
3.2.4. Case of Venous Congestion in Necrosis Group (Case #10 and Case #21)
3.2.5. Case in which a New Flap was Applied after Salvage Procedure for Arterial Insufficiency (Case #12 and Case #14)
3.2.6. The Difference between the Temperature of Perforator Area and the Average Temperature of Total Flap (dT of PF-AFP)
3.2.7. Comparison of Pedicle Flaps and Free Flaps
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Flap Models (n = 28) | POD 3 | POD 7 |
---|---|---|
Necrotic area/total flap ratio (%) | 24.4 | 27.5 |
Temperature difference between total flap and necrotic area | 0.800 | 0.792 |
Statistic | Value |
---|---|
t-value | 0.084 |
p-value | 0.934 |
Dependent Variable | Coefficient | Std. Error | t-Value | p-Value |
---|---|---|---|---|
POD3 Necrotic Area Temp | ||||
Intercept | 28.069 | 4.663 | 6.020 | 0.000 |
Before Flap Temp | 0.149 | 0.141 | 1.057 | 0.300 |
POD7 Necrotic Area Temp | ||||
Intercept | 27.592 | 5.045 | 5.469 | 0.000 |
Before Flap Temp | 0.156 | 0.153 | 1.024 | 0.315 |
Variable | Coefficient | Std. Error | z-Value | p-Value | 95% CI Lower | 95% CI Upper |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Intercept (POD3) | 0.274 | 1.126 | 0.243 | 0.808 | −1.934 | 2.481 |
Before Flap Temp | −0.040 | 0.023 | −1.734 | 0.083 | −0.085 | 0.005 |
POD3 Total Flap Temp | 1.007 | 0.031 | 32.568 | 0.000 | 0.946 | 1.068 |
Intercept (POD7) | 0.003 | 0.881 | 0.003 | 0.997 | −1.724 | 1.730 |
Before Flap Temp | −0.004 | 0.001 | −2.988 | 0.003 | −0.006 | −0.001 |
POD7 Total Flap Temp | 0.980 | 0.025 | 39.099 | 0.000 | 0.931 | 1.029 |
No. of Patient | Sex | Age | Location | Flap | Flap Type | Flap Necrosis |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | M | 61 | Lt. ankle | ALT free flap | Free flap | No necrosis |
2 | F | 27 | Scalp | ALT free flap | Free flap | No necrosis |
3 | M | 16 | Lt. ankle | ALT free flap | Free flap | No necrosis |
4 | M | 55 | Lt. lower leg | ALT free flap | Free flap | No necrosis |
5 | M | 72 | Philtrum | ALT free flap | Free flap | No necrosis |
6 | F | 66 | Lt. ankle | ALT free flap | Free flap | No necrosis |
7 | F | 100 | Lt. upper eyelid | ALT free flap | Free flap | No necrosis |
8 | M | 60 | Lt. foot | ALT free flap | Free flap | Total necrosis |
9 | M | 63 | Lt. ankle | ALT free flap | Free flap | No necrosis |
10 | M | 51 | Lt. foot | ALT free flap | Free flap | Total necrosis |
11 | F | 70 | Rt. foot | ALT free flap | Free flap | No necrosis |
12 | M | 48 | Lt. ankle | TDAP free flap → ALT free flap | Free flap | No necrosis |
13 | F | 23 | Lt. hand | SCIP free flap | Free flap | No necrosis |
14 | M | 75 | Scalp | ALT free flap → vastus lateralis muscle free flap | Free flap | Total necrosis |
15 | M | 81 | Nose | Nasolabial fold flap | Pedicled flap | No necrosis |
16 | M | 56 | Nose | Nasolabial fold flap | Pedicled flap | No necrosis |
17 | M | 52 | Nose | Nasolabial fold flap | Pedicled flap | No necrosis |
18 | M | 91 | Nose | Paramedian forehead flap | Pedicled flap | No necrosis |
19 | M | 57 | Nose | Paramedian forehead flap | Pedicled flap | No necrosis |
20 | M | 57 | Rt. lower leg | ALT pedicled flap | Pedicled flap | No necrosis |
21 | F | 49 | Rt. ankle | Peroneal artery perforator-based FC rotation flap | Pedicled flap | Partial necrosis |
Necrosis Group (n = 4) | |
---|---|
Necrosis type | |
Total necrosis | 3 |
Partial necrosis | 1 |
Vascular compromise | |
Arterial insufficiency | 2 |
Venous congestion | 2 |
Non-Necrosis (n = 18) | Necrosis (n = 4) | Total Necrosis (n = 3) | Partial Necrosis (n = 1) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Age (years) | 57.167 | 58.75 | ||
Sex | ||||
Male | 13 | 3 | ||
Female | 5 | 1 | ||
Temperature difference (dT) between normal skin and perforator (NS-PF) (°C) | ||||
POD 0 | 1.817 | 1.55 (0.484) | 1.633 (0.740) | 1.3 (0.526) |
POD 1 | 1.533 | 1.875 (0.434) | 2 (0.262) | 1.5 (0.842) |
POD 2 | 1.528 | 2.2 (0.434) | 2.467 (0.262) | 1.4 (0.842) |
POD 3 | 0.989 | 2.525 (0.001 *) | 2.533 (0.006 *) | 2.5 (0.105) |
POD 7 | 0.706 | 3.5 (<0.001 *) | 4 (0.002 *) | 2 (0.105) |
Temperature difference (dT) between perforator and average of flap (PF-AFP) (°C) | ||||
POD 0 | 0.539 | 0.175 (0.118) | 0.2 | 0.1 |
POD 1 | 0.35 | −0.175 (0.002 *) | −0.2 | −0.1 |
POD 2 | 0.333 | −0.225 (0.003 *) | −0.2 | −0.3 |
POD 3 | 0.617 | −0.375 (<0.001 *) | −0.233 | −0.8 |
POD 7 | 0.489 | −0.225 (<0.001 *) | −0.333 | −0.1 |
Variable | Coefficient | p-Value |
---|---|---|
Sex (male) | 0.475 | <0.001 |
Flap type (free flap) | 0.185 | 0.611 |
Flap type (pedicled flap) | −0.647 | 0.003 |
Flap necrosis (necrosis) | 2.631 | <0.001 |
Variable | Coefficient | p-Value |
---|---|---|
Sex (male) | −0.258 | 0.088 |
Flap type (free flap) | −0.070 | 0.768 |
Flap type (pedicled flap) | 0.093 | 0.515 |
Flap necrosis (necrosis) | −0.716 | <0.001 |
POD | t-Statistic | p-Value |
---|---|---|
NS-PF POD 0 | 0.927 | 0.366 |
NS-PF POD 1 | 0.271 | 0.789 |
NS-PF POD 2 | −0.217 | 0.831 |
NS-PF POD 3 | −0.656 | 0.520 |
NS-PF POD 7 | −1.547 | 0.139 |
PF-AFP POD 0 | 1.554 | 0.138 |
PF-AFP POD 1 | −0.054 | 0.957 |
PF-AFP POD 2 | 0.326 | 0.748 |
PF-AFP POD 3 | 0.068 | 0.946 |
PF-AFP POD 7 | 0.610 | 0.550 |
Monitoring Method | Advantages | Limitations | References |
---|---|---|---|
Clinical Examination | Non-invasive Widely available Low cost | Limited applicability in buried flaps Risk of poor interrater agreement due to inconsistent flap (failure) appearances | [18] |
Acoustic Doppler Sonography | Non-invasive High sensitivity and specificity Real-time monitoring | Limited applicability in buried flaps Operator-dependent Limited ability to detect venous thrombosis | [17,18] |
Implantable Doppler | Continuous monitoring High sensitivity and specificity Real-time monitoring | Invasive Requires surgical implantation Risk of infection Limited applicability in buried flaps | [17,18] |
Indocyanine Green Fluorescence Angiography | Non-invasive High sensitivity and specificity Real-time monitoring Ability to detect venous thrombosis | Limited applicability in buried flaps Requires specialized equipment Limited ability to detect arterial thrombosis | [18,20] |
Near-Infrared Spectroscopy | Non-invasive Real-time monitoring Ability to detect arterial thrombosis | Limited applicability in buried flaps Requires specialized equipment Limited ability to detect venous thrombosis | [19] |
Tissue Oximetry | Non-invasive Real-time monitoring Ability to detect arterial thrombosis | Limited applicability in buried flaps Requires specialized equipment Limited ability to detect venous thrombosis | [12] |
Transcutaneous Oximetry Measurement | Non-invasive Quantifying measurement Potential for thermal injury | Limited applicability in buried flaps Time required for measurement Low sensitivity | [23] |
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Kim, H.; Kwak, S.H.; Byeon, J.Y.; Lee, D.W.; Kim, J.H.; Lim, S.; Choi, H.J. An Experimental and Clinical Study of Flap Monitoring with an Analysis of the Clinical Course of the Flap Using an Infrared Thermal Camera. Bioengineering 2024, 11, 688. https://doi.org/10.3390/bioengineering11070688
Kim H, Kwak SH, Byeon JY, Lee DW, Kim JH, Lim S, Choi HJ. An Experimental and Clinical Study of Flap Monitoring with an Analysis of the Clinical Course of the Flap Using an Infrared Thermal Camera. Bioengineering. 2024; 11(7):688. https://doi.org/10.3390/bioengineering11070688
Chicago/Turabian StyleKim, Hyun, Si Hyun Kwak, Je Yeon Byeon, Da Woon Lee, Jun Hyuk Kim, Soomin Lim, and Hwan Jun Choi. 2024. "An Experimental and Clinical Study of Flap Monitoring with an Analysis of the Clinical Course of the Flap Using an Infrared Thermal Camera" Bioengineering 11, no. 7: 688. https://doi.org/10.3390/bioengineering11070688