Abstract

Preoperative assessment of the recipient vessels in free flap surgery directly affects the success rate of the operation by determining the flap type, pedicle length, orientation to the recipient site, and need for a vein graft. For this purpose, conventional angiographic methods are still being used with some disadvantages. The aims of this study were to evaluate the potential success of multislice computed tomography angiography in assessment of the recipient vessels before free flap surgery and to reveal if this may be an alternative to conventional angiography. The study was bilaterally carried out in 33 outpatients using a 16-detector spiral computed tomography scanner. In images of multiplanar reconstructions, maximum intensity projections, and three-dimensional volume renderings, the external carotid artery and its main branches were evaluated in terms of availability; patency, stenosis, or occlusion; maximal and minimal external diameters through their traces; variations involving ramification from another main vessel; and abnormal course. The superior thyroid artery was absent bilaterally in two patients (6.06%). The external carotid artery was stenotic on one side in two patients (6.06%) and on each side in one (3.03%). All the remaining vessels appeared without stenosis, occlusion, or variation. We think that multislice computed tomography angiography can provide detailed information about vascular structures and the remaining anatomic structures and their relationships with the recipient vessels. Therefore, multislice computed tomography angiography, as a less invasive vascular imaging method, can be a useful tool before planning free flap surgery.

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