Limited time75% off all plans
Get the app

Microsurgical Techniques

On this page

Intro & Armamentarium - Tiny Titans' Tools

  • Microsurgery: Surgery under magnification (loupes/microscope) for fine structures.
    • Key uses: Free tissue transfer, replantation, nerve repair, lymphatic reconstruction.
  • Magnification:
    • Loupes: 2x-8x.
    • Operating Microscope: 4x-40x; provides illumination, depth.
  • Core Instruments:
    • Needle holders (e.g., Castroviejo).
    • Forceps (e.g., Jeweler's, DeBakey micro).
    • Scissors (e.g., Vannas).
    • Vessel dilators.
    • Microvascular clamps (e.g., Acland).
    • Contrast background (e.g., blue/green).
    • Fine-tip bipolar cautery.
  • Microsutures:
    • Sizes: 8-0 to 12-0 (typically 9-0, 10-0).
    • Material: Nylon (common), Polypropylene.
    • Needles: Fine, tapered, 3/8 or 1/2 circle.
  • Essentials:
    • Irrigation: Heparinized saline/Ringer's lactate.
    • Good ergonomics & tremor control.

Common microsurgical instruments

⭐ For microvascular anastomosis, suture sizes 9-0 and 10-0 are most commonly used.

Vascular Choreography - Stitching Lifelines

Microvascular anastomosis suturing technique

  • Vessel Prep: Gentle handling, adventitial stripping (~2mm), heparinized saline irrigation, Acland clamps.
  • Anastomosis Types:
    • E-E (End-to-End): Standard, similar diameters.
    • E-S (End-to-Side): Size mismatch, bypass, flow-through.
  • Suturing (Interrupted):
    • Suture: 8-0 to 12-0 Nylon. Needle: Tapered, 50-150µm.
    • Stay Sutures: 2-3 (bi-/triangulation).
    • Bites: Full thickness, equidistant, evert intima.
    • Knots: 6-10 per 1mm vessel; 2-1-1 or 3-1-1 throws.
  • Patency Check: Acland "milking" test, Doppler ("whoosh").
  • Avoid: Tension, torsion, kinking, backwalling, intimal trauma.

⭐ The "Acland" or "empty-and-refill" test (milking test) is a simple, reliable intraoperative method to confirm microvascular anastomosis patency by observing blood flow dynamics.

Neural Networks & Tissue Travels - Wiring & Wrapping

  • Nerve Repair (Neurorrhaphy): Aim for tension-free coaptation.
    • Types: Epineurial (common), Perineurial (fascicular), Group fascicular.
    • Suture: 8-0 to 11-0 monofilament.
    • Nerve Grafts: For gaps > 2-3 cm. Donors: Sural, medial antebrachial cutaneous nerve.
    • Axonal Regeneration: ~1 mm/day. 📌 "A Millimeter A Day"
  • Nerve Conduits: Short gaps (< 3 cm); e.g., vein, collagen.
  • Free Tissue Transfer (Free Flaps):
    • Vascularized tissue (skin, muscle, bone) transferred & re-anastomosed.
    • Indications: Large/complex defects, avascular beds.
    • Monitoring: Clinical (color, temp, CRT), Doppler.

⭐ The radial forearm free flap is a workhorse for intraoral reconstruction due to its thin, pliable skin paddle and reliable vascular pedicle.

Flap Vigilance - Watching & Woes

  • Clinical Monitoring (📌 5 C's):
    • Color: Pink (normal); Pale (arterial↓); Dusky/Blue (venous↑)
    • Capillary Refill: 1-2s; ↓/absent (arterial); brisk then absent (venous)
    • Cold/Warmth: Cool (arterial↓); Warm then cool (venous↑)
    • Consistency: Normal turgor; Doughy (venous↑)
    • Cut (Pinprick): Bright red; No blood (arterial↓); Dark (venous↑)
  • Adjuncts: Doppler (handheld/implantable), Tissue pO₂ (>30 mmHg), temperature probes.
  • ⚠️ Compromise:
    • Arterial: Pale, cool, no bleed.
    • Venous: Swollen, dusky, dark bleed.
    • Urgent re-exploration: <4-6 hours.

⭐ Venous thrombosis: most common cause of early free flap failure.

  • Woes: Hematoma, seroma, thrombosis (A/V), kinking, infection, partial/total loss.

Microsurgical flap compromise management

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Microsurgery utilizes magnification (loupes/microscope) for structures typically < 2-3 mm.
  • Vessel anastomosis (end-to-end, end-to-side) is fundamental for free tissue transfer.
  • The "no-touch" technique minimizes intimal trauma, preventing thrombosis.
  • Suture materials are typically 8-0 to 11-0 monofilament nylon.
  • Warm ischemia time is critical; prolonged duration risks flap necrosis.
  • Key applications: free flaps, replantation (digits, limbs), nerve repair, lymphatic surgery.
  • Common complications: vasospasm, thrombosis (arterial/venous), flap failure.

Continue reading on Oncourse

Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.

CONTINUE READING — FREE

or get the app

Rezzy — Oncourse's AI Study Mate

Have doubts about this lesson?

Ask Rezzy, your AI Study Mate, to explain anything you didn't understand

Enjoying this lesson?

Get full access to all lessons, practice questions, and more.

START FOR FREE