Abstract

Choke vessels dilate and contract to regulate blood flow between adjacent arterial angiosomes. In skin flap surgery, when arterial inflow to an angiosome is ligated, choke vessels allow blood supply from an adjacent angiosome. In muscle flap surgery, the vascular anatomy is analogous to skin flaps; however, while it is established that the choke vessels will fully dilate irreversibly after two to three days, no study has yet analyzed the acute changes in each vascular region immediately following ligation of one pedicle. To establish whether the choke vessels open or close immediately following ligation of a pedicle, and how this change affects blood flow in the adjacent proximal and distal vascular regions. Radioactive and fluorescent microspheres in a pig model were used to study the regional intramuscular blood flow in each anatomical zone of a rectus abdominis flap. Blood flow measurements for each zone were calculated relative to the entire muscle at preligation, ligation and various times (15 min to 90 min) postligation. There was no statistically significant difference in blood flow across choke zones as a result of ligation. This signifies that the choke vessels do not significantly dilate to produce a statistically significant measureable change in blood flow. Given these results and previous literature findings, the anatomical presence of choke vessels in a muscle is the strongest determining factor for acute flap viability in surgery.

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