Abstract

The extensor digitorum brevis muscle flap is reliable, safe, and can be used either as a pedicle or as a free flap with minimal donor site morbidity. To increase the existing knowledge of this flap and to establish further anatomic basis for the design and elevation of the extensor digitorum brevis flap, 26 specimens from 13 fresh cadavers were dissected under 3.5 × loupes. The lateral tarsal artery was found to be the main blood supply to the muscle. It has an average diameter of 1.83 ± 0.35 mm and a length of 1.89 ± 0.69 cm. The dorsalis pedis artery has, at the level of the lateral tarsal artery takeoff, a diameter of 3.25 ± 0.62 mm. From this point to the origin of the deep plantar branch, the dorsalis pedis artery has minimal branching, and the surgeon has available an artery homogeneous in diameter that is 6.77 ± 0.99 cm in length. Related neurovascular structures (anterior tibial artery and the venae comitantes, dorsalis pedis and first dorsal metatarsal artery, and deep peroneal nerve) were also studied. A safe and reliable harvesting technique and the “T interposed extensor digitorum brevis” technique for sparing the anterior tibial artery are presented, as are clinical case examples on the use of this flap as a flow-through, extensor digitorum brevis-vascularized nerve graft, a combined extensor digitorum brevis-deep peroneal nerve graft, and a bilobed extensor digitorum brevis-dorsalis pedis fasciosubcutaneous free flap. (Plast. Reconstr. Surg. 105: 1347, 2000.)

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