SKIN GRAFT Powerpoint
SKIN GRAFT Powerpoint
SKIN GRAFT Powerpoint
By
Dr. Diyar A. Salih
Plastic Surgery Resident
Kurdistan, Slemani
Nov 26th, 2007
Skin functions
Protective barrier, against:
2. Trauma
3. Radiation
4. Temperature changes
5. Infection
Cont.
Thermoregulation, through:
2. Vasoconstriction & Vasodilatation
3. Insensible fluid loss control
Skin anatomy
Skin varies in thickness depending on:
Anatomic location / thickest in the
palm & sole of the feet, thinnest in
the eyelids & postauricular region.
Sex / male thicker than female.
Age / children have thin skin
Skin layers
1. Epidermis
Stratified
squamous
epithelium /
Keratinocytes.
No blood vessels
/Nutrients from
dermis by
diffusion through
basement
membrane.
Cont.
Dermis:
Papillary dermis
Thinner
Loose connective tissue, containing:
1. Capillaries
2. Elastic fibers
3. Reticular fibers
4. Some collagen
Cont.
Reticular dermis:
Thicker layer
Dense connective tissue, containing:
1. Larger blood vessels
2. Closely interlaced elastic fibers
3. Coarse, branching collagen fibers arranged in
layers parallel to the surface.
4. Fibroblasts
5. Mast cells
6. Nerve endings
7. Lymphatics
8. Some epidermal appendages
Epithelial cell source
Epithelial cells re-epithelialize when
the overlying epithelium is removed
or destroyed by;
2. Partial thickness burn
3. Abrasions
4. STSG harvesting.
Cont.
Source, intradermal structures
(epithelial appendages):
1. Sebaceous glands
2. Sweat glands
3. Apocrine glands
4. Hair follicles
What’s skin graft?
Is transplantation of the skin from
one part to another part
(removed from its blood supply).
Types
According to the origin:
Autograft / from the same
individual
Allograft / from different
individual (of the same
species)
Xenograft / from different
species (gene pig)
Types, cont.
According to the dermal thickness:
STSG (epidermis + variable thickness
dermis)
Thin (0.005 – 0.012 inches)
Intermediate (0.012 – 0.018)
Thick (0.018 – 0.030)
Could be;
Meshed
Sheet
plexuses
Larger no. of epithelial appendages
THICK GRAFTS
DISADVANTAGES :
More favorable conditions for survival
3. Location
4. Size
5. Aesthetic concerns
FULL THICKNESS SKIN GRAFTS
Advantages/
• Kissing capillaries;
• Graft revascularized through kissing
capillaries.
Graft revascularization theories
• Neovascularization (invade graft)
• Communication (between graft & bed
vessels)
• Neovascularization + communication
• Graft vasculature made up primarily
from its Original vessels before
transfer.
How to optimize TAKE?
• Well vascular bed, seldom take in
exposed;
• Bone without periosteum (despite orbit or
temporal bone)
• Cartilage without perichondrium
• Tendon without paratenon
• Close contact (between graft & bed);
• Hematomas
• Seromas
These 2 immobilize & compromise graft take.
Skin graft adherence phases
• First phase:
phase
Begins with placement of the graft
on the bed.
Graft adhered by fibrin deposition.
Lasts 72 hr.
• Second phase:
phase
Growth of fibrous tissue & vessels
into the graft.
Sheet graft
Definition/ Is a continuous,
uninterrupted graft.
Advantages/
Superior aesthetic result
Disadvantages/
Not allowing blood or serum to drain.
Meshed graft
Definition/ Is a sheet graft after
multiple mechanical incisions.
Advantages/
• Allowing immediate graft expansion.
• Cover larger area per cm2
• Allows blood & serum drainage.
Disadvantages/
1. Pebbled appearance (aesthetically not
acceptable).
What will happen if a wound
heals without skin graft?
Granulating wounds heal secondarily
demonstrate the greatest degree of
contraction & are most prone to
hypertrophic scarring.
EPITHELIAL APPENDAGES IN
THE SKIN GRAFT
Their no. depends on the dermal
thickness.
Graft sweats / depend on:
1. Sweat glands no. transferred
2. Sympathetic reinnervation of these glands from
the recipient site.
Consider/
Consider
2. Color
3. Texture
4. Thickness
5. Vascularity
6. Donor site morbidity
Sites/
Sites
• Any where
• Face:
Supracalvicular area
Upper eyelid (small amount, very thin)
– Common sites (for STSG):
Thigh
Buttocks
Abdominal wall
SG postoperative care
Graft failure, causes;
2. Hematoma
3. Serroma
Raising the graft, prevent revascularization.
• Infection ( > 105 organism per gram of tissue)
Minimized by careful bed preparation & early graft inspection
after applying to a contaminated bed.
Infection at the graft donor site can converts partial thickness
dermal loss into complete thickness dermal loss.
8. Mobilization
Interrupt revascularization, prevented by tie-over bolster
dressing on the face & trunk, splinting on the extremities.
Biologic dressing
Definition/
Temporary wound coverage, eg. Large burns, necrotizing
facsiitis.
Advantage/
Protect the recipient bed from desiccation & further trauma until
definitive closure.
Biologic skin substitutes/
1. Human allograft (take, rejected after 10 days, unless the
recipient immunosuppressed as in large burns, rejection take
longer).
2. Amnion
3. Xenograft (pig skin), rejected before becoming vascularized
(take).
Synthetic skin substitutes/
1. Silicone
2. Polymers
3. Composed membranes
Human epidermis (in vitro)
Human epidermis cultured in vitro to
yield sheet of cultured epithelium
that will provide coverage , albeit
fragile (due to lack of epidermis), for
Large wounds.
THE END
THANK YOU