Power modulation contrast enhanced ultrasound for postoperative perfusion monitoring following free tissue transfer in head and neck surgery
Power modulation contrast enhanced ultrasound for postoperative perfusion monitoring following free tissue transfer in head and neck surgery
This feasibility study evaluated whether contrast enhanced ultrasound (CEU) was able to assess free flap perfusion following free tissue transfer in the head and neck region. Thirty-six patients underwent standard clinical monitoring (SCM) and CEU postoperatively. The time taken for each technique to detect flap failure was recorded. Qualitative CEU analysis by visual assessment predicted survival in 30/30 (100%) and failure in 5/6 (83%) flaps with sensitivity, specificity, positive (PPV) and negative (NPV) predictive values of 100, 86, 97 and 100%, respectively. Quantitative CEU measurement of blood volume (?) values within healthy perfused flaps was over 60 times higher than in failing flaps (8.25 ± 2.82 dB vs. 0.12 ± 0.17 dB, respectively, P < 0.0001). If a cut-off ? value of <1.5 dB was used to predict future flap failure, the accuracy of the test was 100% (sensitivity, specificity, PPV, NPV). If a cut-off ? value of >1.9 dB indicated flap success, the PPV and NPV are 100%. Following surgery, SCM took 76 (±15) h to detect flap failure compared with 18 (±38) h with CEU (P < 0.05). CEU is highly accurate in its ability to distinguish between perfused and failing flaps. The technique is quick (<10 min) and capable of imaging all flap types.
contrast, ultrasound, free flap, perfusion
1211-1217
Sharma, S.
006485ea-336e-4389-b3ab-93d1484c0ca0
Anand, R.
d9b9c4c5-ddc4-4283-b26d-816340d6e84c
Hickman, M.
278b63b4-126b-4db6-88a7-fcd9474d814c
Senior, R.
b369903e-0bbb-4ef1-af7c-27d24b4320c8
Walji, S.
5eda62f0-487b-4851-b59e-a23837305d72
Ramchandani, P.L.
93d792a8-fcde-470d-b26e-bf2765466f73
Culliford, D.J.
25511573-74d3-422a-b0ee-dfe60f80df87
Ilankovan, V.
e743cd36-166b-474f-8dd4-8330443ff0b4
Greaves, Kim
176a04cc-a3b0-451d-9d2e-59db4cde71c7
December 2010
Sharma, S.
006485ea-336e-4389-b3ab-93d1484c0ca0
Anand, R.
d9b9c4c5-ddc4-4283-b26d-816340d6e84c
Hickman, M.
278b63b4-126b-4db6-88a7-fcd9474d814c
Senior, R.
b369903e-0bbb-4ef1-af7c-27d24b4320c8
Walji, S.
5eda62f0-487b-4851-b59e-a23837305d72
Ramchandani, P.L.
93d792a8-fcde-470d-b26e-bf2765466f73
Culliford, D.J.
25511573-74d3-422a-b0ee-dfe60f80df87
Ilankovan, V.
e743cd36-166b-474f-8dd4-8330443ff0b4
Greaves, Kim
176a04cc-a3b0-451d-9d2e-59db4cde71c7
Sharma, S., Anand, R., Hickman, M., Senior, R., Walji, S., Ramchandani, P.L., Culliford, D.J., Ilankovan, V. and Greaves, Kim
(2010)
Power modulation contrast enhanced ultrasound for postoperative perfusion monitoring following free tissue transfer in head and neck surgery.
International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, 39 (12), .
(doi:10.1016/j.ijom.2010.07.013).
(PMID:20832244)
Abstract
This feasibility study evaluated whether contrast enhanced ultrasound (CEU) was able to assess free flap perfusion following free tissue transfer in the head and neck region. Thirty-six patients underwent standard clinical monitoring (SCM) and CEU postoperatively. The time taken for each technique to detect flap failure was recorded. Qualitative CEU analysis by visual assessment predicted survival in 30/30 (100%) and failure in 5/6 (83%) flaps with sensitivity, specificity, positive (PPV) and negative (NPV) predictive values of 100, 86, 97 and 100%, respectively. Quantitative CEU measurement of blood volume (?) values within healthy perfused flaps was over 60 times higher than in failing flaps (8.25 ± 2.82 dB vs. 0.12 ± 0.17 dB, respectively, P < 0.0001). If a cut-off ? value of <1.5 dB was used to predict future flap failure, the accuracy of the test was 100% (sensitivity, specificity, PPV, NPV). If a cut-off ? value of >1.9 dB indicated flap success, the PPV and NPV are 100%. Following surgery, SCM took 76 (±15) h to detect flap failure compared with 18 (±38) h with CEU (P < 0.05). CEU is highly accurate in its ability to distinguish between perfused and failing flaps. The technique is quick (<10 min) and capable of imaging all flap types.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 15 September 2010
Published date: December 2010
Keywords:
contrast, ultrasound, free flap, perfusion
Organisations:
Primary Care & Population Sciences
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 365831
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/365831
ISSN: 0901-5027
PURE UUID: 8bbf37ba-bb77-4aca-96e1-a42016f5fc2a
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Date deposited: 18 Jun 2014 09:58
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:19
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Contributors
Author:
S. Sharma
Author:
R. Anand
Author:
M. Hickman
Author:
R. Senior
Author:
S. Walji
Author:
P.L. Ramchandani
Author:
D.J. Culliford
Author:
V. Ilankovan
Author:
Kim Greaves
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