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Early postoperative bone scintigraphy in the evaluation of microvascular bone grafts in head and neck reconstruction

Jonas Schuepbach1,2 email, Olivier Dassonville2 email, Gilles Poissonnet2 email and Francois Demard2 email

1Department of Otolaryngology, Head and neck surgery, University Hospital Inselspital Berne, Freiburgstrasse 10, CH-3010 Berne, Switzerland

2Centre Antoine Lacassagn, 33, av.de Valombrose, F-06189 Nice, France

author email corresponding author email

Head & Face Medicine 2007, 3:20doi:10.1186/1746-160X-3-20

Published: 20 April 2007

Abstract

Background

Bone scintigraphy was performed to monitor anastomotic patency and bone viability.

Methods

In this retrospective study, bone scans were carried out during the first three postoperative days in a series of 60 patients who underwent microvascular bone grafting for reconstruction of the mandible or maxilla.

Results

In our series, early bone scans detected a compromised vascular supply to the bone with high accuracy (p < 10-6) and a sensitivity that was superior to the sensitivity of clinical monitoring (92% and 75% respectively).

Conclusion

When performing bone scintigraphy during the first three postoperative days, it not only helps to detect complications with high accuracy, as described in earlier studies, but it is also an additional reliable monitoring tool to decide whether or not microvascular revision surgery should be performed. Bone scans were especially useful in buried free flaps where early postoperative monitoring depended exclusively on scans.

According to our experience, we recommend bone scans as soon as possible after surgery and immediately in cases suspicious of vascularized bone graft failure.


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