Abstract

The osteocutaneous fibula free flap (FFF)'s skin paddle is commonly vascularized by the septocutaneous (SC) perforators of the peroneal artery that course through the posterior intercrural septum. However, a rare anatomical variant exists in which the skin paddle is vascularized via a separate arterial system to the fibula. We report the case of a 31-year-old man who was planned for osteocutaneous FFF reconstruction of his anterior maxilla and hard palate following resection of nasal septal chondrosarcoma. Intraoperatively, he was found to have a rare anatomical variant: the perforator to the skin paddle arose proximal to the peroneal artery, off the tibioperoneal trunk. This was a fortuitous, rare anatomical variant, as it enabled a double free flap reconstruction from a single donor site-an intraoral fasciocutaneous free flap oriented with its long axis perpendicular to that of an osseous FFF. This particular defect enabled reconstructive freedom beyond that of the standard osteocutaneous free flap, in which the skin paddle orientation is limited by the risk of kinking the septal perforator. This case report summarizes the flap raising technique and the learning points relevant to the osteocutaneous FFF with no SC perforators. The extant literature on this anatomical variant is then summarized. The average estimated rate of FFF with no SC perforators is between 3% and 25%, based on four published studies.

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