Kc. Skolleborg et F. Samdal, EFFECT OF PREOPERATIVE INFLAMMATION OF THE WOUND BED ON SURVIVAL OF SKIN FLAPS IN RATS, Scandinavian journal of plastic and reconstructive surgery and hand surgery, 27(3), 1993, pp. 167-171
Pedicled dorsal flaps were raised and resutured on the backs of 20 rat
s. Aseptic inflammation of the bed of the wound flap was induced one w
eek before the operation in 10 rats by scratching with a needle; the o
ther 10 acted as controls. A week after the operation the extent of ne
crosis was estimated by computer assisted planimetry. Blood flow in th
e four quarters of the flap and in normal skin was estimated using the
microsphere technique. A larger mean area of the skin flaps survived
in rats in which the wound bed had been scratched (71%) compared with
the controls (61%) (p < 0.05); blood flow in the flaps was also higher
(p < 0.0005). We conclude that the most likely explanation for these
results was preoperative angiogenesis in the wound bed.