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Reconstructive facial plastic surgery : a problem-solving manual /

Drawing on decades of operating room and teaching experience, Dr. Weerda and his team offer a complete guide to reconstructive options for facial, head, and neck defects in this eagerly awaited second edition. Their systematic, step-by-step approach, with an emphasis on meticulous preoperative plann...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Weerda, Hilko (Autor)
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Alemán
Publicado: [Place of publication not identified] : Thieme Medical Publishing Inc., 2014.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Reconstructive Facial Plastic Surgery: A Problem-Solving Manual; Title Page; Copyright; Contents; Foreword to the 2nd Edition; Foreword to the First Edition; Preface to the 2nd Edition; Contributors; I Anatomy, Principles of Facial Surgery, and Coverage of Defects; 1 Anatomy of the Skin and Skin Flaps; The Skin (Fig. 1.1); Types of Skin Flaps; Random Pattern Flaps (Fig. 1.2); Axial Pattern Flaps (Fig. 1.3); Island Flaps (Fig. 1.4); Myocutaneous Island Flaps (Fig. 1.5; see also Fig. 12.1); Neurovascular Island Flaps; 2 Basic Principles of Facial Surgery; Suture Materials and Techniques.
  • Basic Instrument Set for Reconstructive Facial Plastic Surgery (Fig. 2.7)The Binocular Loupe (Fig. 2.7c); Additional instruments; Wound Management, Repair of Small Defects, and Scar Revision; Relaxed Skin Tension Lines, Vascular Supply (Fig. 2.8i), and "Esthetic Units" (Fig. 2.20); Wound Management, Repair of Small Defects, and Scar Revision; Management of Wounds with Traumatic Tattooing; Scar Revision by W-Plasty and the Broken-Line Technique of Webster (1969) (Fig. 2.8a-j); Small Excisions; Z-Plasty (Figs. 2.15 and 2.16); Postoperative Treatment of Scars.
  • Esthetic Units of the Face (Fig. 2.20)Tumor Resection with Histologic Control (Fig. 2.21); Free Skin Grafts (Fig. 2.22); Composite Grafts (Fig. 2.23); Cartilagenous and Composite Grafts for Auricular and Nasal Reconstruction; Graft Nomenclature; 3 Coverage of Defects; Local Flaps; Advancement Flaps; Advancement Flap of Burow (1855) (Fig. 3.1); Burow's U-Advancement (Figs. 3.2-3.7); V-Y and V-Y-S Advancement of Argamaso (1974) (Figs. 3.8-3.10); Flaps without Continous Epithelial Coverage (Rettinger 1996a, b); Sliding Flap (Figs. 3.11-3.14); Pedicled Flaps; Transposition Flap (Fig. 3.15).
  • Rotation Flap (Fig. 3.19)Bilobed Flap (Fig. 3.22); Rhomboid Flap (Figs. 3.24-3.27); Turnover Flap (Fig. 3.28); Tubed Pedicle Flap (Bipedicle Flap) (Fig. 3.29); Distant Flaps; Distant Tubed Pedicle Flap; Myocutaneous and Myofascial Flaps (see Figs. 12.1-12.3); Special Part; II Coverage of Defects in Specific Facial Regions; 4 Forehead Region; Median Forehead Region; Wedge-Shaped Defects (Fig. 4.1); H-Flap (Fig. 4.2); Double Rotation Flap (Fig. 4.3); Lateral Forehead Defects (Fig. 4.5); 5 Nasal Region; Glabella and Nasal Root (Figs. 5.1-5.9); U-Advancement Flap of Burow (Fig. 5.1).
  • V-Y Advancement (Fig. 5.2 see also Figs. 3.8-3.10); Sliding Flap (Fig. 5.7); Nasal Dorsum (Figs. 5.8-5.12); Bilobed Flap (Fig. 5.8); Island Flap (Fig. 5.9); Rieger Flap (Fig. 5.10); Nasolabial Flap (Fig. 5.11); Median Forehead Flap (Fig. 5.12); Nasal Tip (Figs. 5.13-5.17); Bilobed Flap (Fig. 5.13); V-Y Advancement Flap of Rieger (1957) (Fig. 5.14); Median and Paramedian Forehead Flap (Fig. 5.15); Larger Defects of the Nasal Tip and Ala; Frontotemporal Flap of Schmid and Meyer (Figs. 5.17 and 5.18); Nasal Flank; Flap Advancement of Burow (1855) (Fig. 5.22).