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Free-Flap Free Flap

Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 1989
We present a patient who sustained bilateral below-knee amputations that were treated with skin grafts as initial coverage. A latissimus dorsi free flap was later used as definitive coverage of one stump. Then at a subsequent operation a portion of the same latissimus dorsi free flap was reharvested, again as a free flap, and transplanted to cover the ...
F A, Valauri, B S, Alpert, H J, Buncke
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Flag flap - Kite flap Dorsal metacarpal flap

Interactive Surgery, 2007
The flag flap is a pedicled dorsal digital flap, combining a skin paddle (the “flag”) and a vascular pedicle (the flag “pole”). Its vascularisation depends on the dorsal metacarpal arteries (DMCA). It has been described in 1963, by Holevitch [1] with harvest of a cutaneovascular pole; it has been brilliantly modified in 1979 by Foucher et al.
DELEUZE, JP   +3 more
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Venous flaps

British Journal of Plastic Surgery, 1992
One of the earliest postulates concerning the physiological basis of flap survival is attributed to Sushruta, who, in his inimitable style, very succinctly noted in Sanskrit verse the following words: "through continuity survives." Sanskrit being a very telegraphic language, what derives from these words is as follows: Through (the flap's) continuity ...
M R, Thatte, R L, Thatte
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Are “Free Flaps” “Free” Flaps?

Journal of Reconstructive Microsurgery, 2021
Abstract Background Even standard microvascular tissue transfers are time consuming, require great skill and intensity, and can be stressful. Not surprisingly, work-related relative value units are considered by many microsurgeons to be suboptimal. Some might even say that “free flaps” indeed really are “free” flaps.
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Flap flap

ACM SIGGRAPH ASIA 2010 Computer Animation Festival, 2010
Desert. Somewhere. Two Birds with digestive disorder are fooling around with an old sunbleached skull... but even a skull has its limits.
Tom Weber   +1 more
openaire   +1 more source

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