Abstract

Based on our cadaveric study findings and the clinical practice, the improved submental island flaps (SIF) used on a case series to reconstruct postoperative defects were reviewed and analyzed, to summarize the technical operation of flap cutting and propose the anterograde anatomical technique of point-line-plane alignment. The cadaveric study was carried out first and a case series of about 23 head and neck tumor cases that underwent one-stage SIF repair were reviewed and followed up. The intraoperative anatomy, the technical essentials for vascular pedicle protection and submandibular lymph nodes treatment, and the rational design of flap incisions were analyzed and described. Most patients (21/23, 91.3%), comprising 19 males and 4 females with a mean age of 59 years, recovered completely from the application of SIFs in the repair and reconstruction of head and neck tumors; Only 2 patients experienced partial flap necrosis, which resolved following a local dressing change. The predominant donor site complication was transitory paralysis of the mandibular marginal branch of the facial nerve (MMBFN) (3/23, 13.0%), and the donor site was closed in one stage without skin grafting. The hair growth on skin flaps was not an issue for male patients requiring postoperative radiotherapy. SIF is a viable choice for correcting abnormalities of the head and neck tumor with the convenience of flap cutting and the effectiveness of the repair. In addition, it permits simultaneous treatment of the lymph nodes in the region I.

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