J Korean Soc Plast Reconstr Surg.
2000 May;27(3):329-333.
Management of Hair Line Using Skin Graft after Tissue Expansion for the Auricular Reconstruction of Microtia
- Affiliations
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- 1Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, College of Medicine, Seoul National University.
Abstract
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Reconstructing the ear with autogenous rib cartilage is one of the most preferred methods for
microtic ear reconstruction. Sometimes, when using this method, the skin envelope size is not
large enough for the cartilage framework. With tissue expansion, a more adequately sized
hairless skin envelope can be developed. Usually we recommend that canaloplasty be delayed
after external ear reconstruction. But when the external ear canal has been reconstructed
before external ear reconstruction, the remaining hairless skin for an envelope is so deficient
that even though using tissue expansion, it is nearly impossible to develop well-qualified
hairless skin envelope. From January, 1996 to December, 1998, we reconstructed auricles using
tissue expansion, followed by excision of hair-bearing skin and grafting of full-thickness
skin in five microtic patients whose external ear canals had been reconstructed before
external ear reconstruction. The skin donor area was the contralateral postauricular area.
Two to three weeks after the skin graft, autogenous cartilage grafts followed. No graft was
lost. Color and texture was well matched, and the hair-bearing tissue portions were almost
completely removed. Our method has several advantages: 1) it uses local tissue maximally;
2) it leaves the capsule intact, which can improve flap circulation; 3) it may thin the flap
as much as it can be, which can reveal well defined cartilage framework; 4) it allows easy
removal of hair-bearing tissue portions; 5) it provides a well-vascularized bed for graft
survival and preserves the temporoparietal fascia, which can be used for secondary reconstruction
if necessary; 6) Tissue expansion can reduce the amount of hair-bearing portion which should be removed.