Reconstruction Of The Burnt Nose Using A Carved Flap In Four Cases

2019 
Techniques for reconstructing nasal defects in burns are very limited because the surrounding scar tissue makes it difficult to use local flaps. The authors report their experience using the Converse scalping flap harvested from scarred skin, placed as a mass on the nasal area, then secondarily carved to shape the nose and covered by a skin graft. This is a retrospective study of 4 patients, 3 men and 1 woman, with an average age of 45 years, who were operated on between 1994 and 2013 using this technique for postburn nasal reconstruction. Patients had 45% burns on average. The flap was weaned from its donor site at the third week and the frontalis donor area grafted. Several months later, the flap was sculpted from the outside to the inside in the three dimensions, removing the scarred epidermal areas to restore the aesthetic units of the nose, which were grafted using a full thickness skin graft. The final aesthetic result of the nasal reconstruction was evaluated by the patient and the surgical team. The four nasal reconstructions were carried out to completion. Three were rated as ‘very good’ (75%) and one was rated as ‘good’ (25%). The Converse flap modification, referred to as the “carved flap”, to reconstruct the burned nose is a reliable technique, possible on a scarred forehead with no additional donor site morbidity.
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