Reconstructive ladder

The reconstructive ladder is a term coined by reconstructive plastic surgeons to describe levels of increasingly complex management of wounds.[1] The surgeon should start on the lowest rung and move up until a suitable technique is arrived at.

The ladder

There are several small variations in the reconstructive ladder[2][3] in the scientific literature, but the principles remains the same:

Rung 1: Healing by secondary intention
Rung 2: Primary closure
Rung 3: Delayed primary closure
Rung 4: Split thickness graft
Rung 5: Full thickness skin graft
Rung 6: Tissue expansion
Rung 7: Random flap
Rung 8: Axial flap
Rung 9: Free flap

References

  1. ABC of wound healing: BMJ 2006;332;710-712 Reconstructive surgery, D. E. Boyce, K. Shokrollahi
  2. sBMJ
  3. Orthop Clin North Am. 1993 Jul;24(3):393-409, The reconstructive ladder. An orthoplastic approach, L. Levin

See Also

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, October 13, 2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.