skin excision
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Deirdre Leake ◽  
Janet Lee

Energy based devices have been developed for the purposes of tissue contraction and skin tightening. Its application in the face and neck have been explored using lasers, temperature controlled monopolar and bipolar radiofrequency, and ultrasound. The purpose of this chapter is to explore the various applications for the face and neck using Renuvion™, a unique energy driven device based on plasma generated from the combination of helium gas and radiofrequency energy. The advantage of this technology is its ability to offer precise delivery of heat to tissue with minimal thermal spread, in part due to the rapid cooling aided by the helium gas. We will explore the options in which this technology can be incorporated to rejuvenate the face and neck, the patient selection considerations in choosing method of approach, surgical technique, anticipated outcomes, potential concerns and or complications associated with this and expected perioperative care. Applications in the face and neck include: (1) Subdermally in the neck as a stand alone procedure with or without liposuction. (2) Subdermally in a limited incision, non-excisional technique with a concomitant platysmaplasty either with an open approach or percutaneous use of suture suspension for the platysmal muscle. (3) Subdermally in conjunction with an open traditional rhytidectomy involving skin excision. (4) Ablative resurfacing—fractional or pulsed and full continuous modalities (non-FDA cleared at the time of this writing). It is the authors’ experience that with appropriate patient selection this can be a powerful tool that can deliver skin tightening and rhytid reduction not seen by other technologies available.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 131-136
Author(s):  
Wei-Wei Zhang ◽  
◽  
Dong-Run Tang ◽  
Tong Wu ◽  
Feng-Yuan Sun ◽  
...  

AIM: To evaluate the effects, advantages, disadvantages, and indications of infrabrow skin excision to correct upper eyelid dermatochalasis in middle-aged and elderly Chinese women. METHODS: Sixty eyelids in 30 patients were subjected to this surgical procedure from January to June 2018. All patients had upper eyelid dermatochalasis, and the functions of their levator palpebrae were all normal. The primary indications of the procedure were upper lid dermatochalasis with lateral hooding. All 30 patients underwent infrabrow skin excision at Shanxi Eye Hospital. The degree of skin relaxation before and after surgery was evaluated in all patients, and surgical outcomes and postoperative complications were also assessed. RESULTS: All patients were female, ranging from 40 to 64 (mean: 53.20±7.10) years old. Skin relaxation of the upper eyelid was improved in all 30 patients. One month after the operation, 52 lids (86.7%) showed good results and 8 lids (13.33%) showed fair results. The objective Strasser system was applied to evaluate surgical results at 1 and 6 months. All patients had scores between 0 and 1 point, indicating good results. Preoperative unsatisfactory position and shape of the eyebrows were improved, and crow's feet and frontal lines were reduced. All patients were satisfied with the results. No complications related to wound dehiscence, lagophthalmos, or hypertrophic scars were observed. CONCLUSION: Infrabrow skin excision is a simple, useful operation to reconstruct the upper eyelids in selected patients of Chinese ancestry. This procedure not only retains the advantages of classic blepharoplasty, but also alleviates many eyebrow problems at the same time, and maintains the original shape of the eyelid, minimizes scarring, and produces a smoother, more youthful appearance.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (10) ◽  
pp. 3220
Author(s):  
Madhusoodan Gupta ◽  
Deepti Varshney

Gynaecomastia is excessive or abnormal enlargement of male breast tissue. It is one of a common problem among young men. The term gynaecomastia means female like enlargement of male breast due to increase ductal tissue, stroma or fat. Most common cause of gynaecomastia is idiopathic. Surgical treatment of gynaecomastia involves liposuction and glandular excision and in few cases skin excision. Here author presents a case of 24 years old young healthy male with Simon’s grade 2B bilateral gynaecomastia. He had stubborn fat over bilateral chest which was resistant to exercise. Gynaecomastia was mixed type in characteristic having adipose tissue as well as glandular tissue enlargement. Bilateral liposuction and glandular excision by limited periareolar incision under general anesthesia as a day care procedure was done. In our procedure we used Cross chest liposuction. Patient was discharged at the same evening without any complications. After four months of follow up patient has male pattern chest with almost invisible scar and intact Nipple areolar complex (NAC) sensation.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shiro Jimi ◽  
Arman Saparov ◽  
Seiko Shimizu ◽  
Motoyasu Miyazaki ◽  
Satoshi Takagi

Scar tissue formation is a result of excess healing reactions after wounding. Hypertrophic scars scarcely develop in a mouse. In the present study, we established a novel experimental model of a scar-forming wound by resecting a small portion of the abdominal wall on the lower center of the abdomen, which exposed contractive forces by the surrounding muscle tissue. As a tension-less control, a back-skin excision model was used with a splint fixed onto the excised skin edge, and granulation tissue formed on the muscle facia supported by the back skeleton. One week after the resection, initial healing reactions such as fibroblast proliferation took place in both models. However, after 21 days, lesions with collagen-rich granulation tissues forming multiple nodular/spherical-like structures developed only in the abdominal-wall model. The lesions are analogous to scar lesions in humans. Such lesions, however, did not develop in the back-skin excision model. Therefore, this animal model is unique in that fibrous scar tissues form under a physiological condition without using any artificial factors and is valuable for studying the pathogenesis and preclinical treatment of scar lesions.


2021 ◽  
pp. 229255032110270
Author(s):  
Sinem Eroglu ◽  
Alpay Duran ◽  
Bora Akalın

Background: This study aimed to analyze postoperative upper pole fullness, upper/lower pole ratios, bottoming-out deformity, and complication rates for patients who underwent planned bilateral reduction mammoplasty for gigantomastia using the superomedial dermoglandular pedicle technique and Wise-pattern skin excision. Methods: A total of 105 consecutive patients were evaluated postoperatively within a year in full lateral position, and the upper pole was between the lines drawn horizontally from the nipple meridian, where the breast became evident on the chest wall. Flat and slightly convex upper pole slopes were considered well-rounded; the concave ones were evaluated as exhibiting decreased fullness. The lower pole was the height between the horizontal line passing through the level of the inframammary fold and nipple meridian. Bottoming-out deformity was evaluated according to the 45/55% ratio developed by Mallucci and Branford, where the bottom pole was above 55%, at which it was held to be leaning toward bottoming-out deformity. Results: The upper and lower pole ratios were 44.79% ± 2.80% and 55.21% ± 2.80%, respectively. In 4 cases, a lower pole distance of >55% was leaning toward bottoming-out deformity. A minimum of 12 months was required after surgery to detect upper pole fullness and any possible bottoming-out deformity. The upper pole fullness was achieved in 94% of cases that underwent superomedial dermoglandular pedicle Wise-pattern breast reduction. Conclusion: The use of the superomedial dermoglandular pedicle technique with the Wise-pattern in breast reduction operations helps in ensuring upper pole fullness, resulting in less bottoming-out deformity and requiring less revision.


2021 ◽  
pp. 088532822110128
Author(s):  
Chunming Zhao ◽  
Yangyi Dong ◽  
Jialin Liu ◽  
Hongxing Cai ◽  
Zhouru Li ◽  
...  

Faster recovery and fewer scars are ideal wound healing. We have demonstrated that the cannabinoid receptor 2 (CB2) agonist Gp1a is beneficial to skin wound healing, which inhibits inflammation and fibrogenesis while promoting re-epithelialization. However, the systemic administration is imprecise and overqualified for a local skin wound. Herein, we prepared Gp1a-gel using triglycerol monostearate (Tm) hydrogel and detected whether the Gp1a-gel worked effectively on mouse skin excision wounds. The results showed that Gp1a-gel might sustainably increase the CB2 for at least 8 days. It decreased inflammation and fibrogenesis while promoting wound enclosure and re-epithelialization. These results suggested Gp1a-gel may utilize as a potential formulation strategy to treat the skin wound.


2021 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 121-130
Author(s):  
Azeez Raji Sheidu ◽  
Abdulkadir Umar Zezi ◽  
Abubakar Ahmed ◽  
Ben Ahmed Chindo ◽  
Garba Mohammed Magaji

Ficus platyphylla (Fp) has been used in Nigerian traditional medicine for the management of pain, ulcer, wound, epilepsy and inflammation. The efficacy of its gum from the stem bark for the management of wound has been widely acclaimed among the Hausa communities of Northern Nigeria and therefore, this study was aimed at examining the antimicrobial and wound healing potential of methanol extract of F. platyphylla stem bark (MEFpSB) in order to provide scientific basis for its antimicrobial and wound healing properties. Preliminary phytochemical screening was done and antimicrobial activity using some pathogenic micro-organisms were evaluated following its wound healing effectiveness in Wistar rats using the model of superficial skin excision wound. Data were analysed using one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) followed by Dunnet’s t-test. The results of preliminary phytochemical screeningrevealed the presence of carbohydrate, cardiac glycosides, saponins, flavonoids, triterpenes, tannins, alkaloids with anthraquinones absent. The extract showed antimicrobial activity on Staphylococcus aureus, Corynebacterium ulcerans, Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumonia and Salmonella typhi and significant (p< 0.05, p< 0.001) decrease in wound measurement for 11 days. This study demonstrated that MEFpSB possesses antimicrobial activity with wound healing properties that justifies the ethno-medicinal use of the plant in wound/ulcer healings. Keywords: Wound healing; Antimicrobial; Ficus platyphylla; Formulation; Topical


2021 ◽  
Vol 54 (02) ◽  
pp. 208-210
Author(s):  
Dushyant Jaiswal ◽  
Mayur Raman Mantri ◽  
Vinay Kant Shankhdhar ◽  
Snehjeet Hemant Wagh

AbstractA 17-year-old girl with large malignant phyllodes tumor of left breast underwent a radical mastectomy with large skin excision resulting in defect of 20 cm × 18 cm. Postoperative radiation therapy necessitated robust cover with flap. The challenge was compounded by her body habitus. Both abdomen and back were deficient as donor sites and a single-island anterolateral thigh (ALT) flap would need skin grafts, volume deficit withstanding. We harvested chimeric ALT plus tensor fascia lata (TFL) perforator free flap sparing all muscles and nerves. Microvascular anastomoses were done to the second internal mammary artery (IMA) perforator artery and vein. The donor site was closed primarily. The TFL flap territory recruited almost three times the volume of ALT territory and allowed us to create a matching breast mound in addition to covering the defect. She tolerated 40 Gy radiation well and doesn’t desire further augmentation. Consistency of ALT and TFL perforators makes this a replicable procedure.


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