Abdominoplasty
Breast augmentation
Breast reduction & uplift
Laser resurfacing
Fat Grafting
Liposuction
Melanoma
Sun protection
Basal cell cancer
Squamous cell skin cancers
Skin grafts
Facial repairs
Tissue expansion
Facial fractures
Trauma & burns
   
 
 
   
 
 
  Skin grafts  
 


When the amount of tissue (skin) that is required to be removed cannot be simply sutured(stitched) together, repair with skin imported from elsewhere on the patient is required. Flap repairs use immediately adjacent skin which is moved into the defect whilst maintaining a blood supply to that flap.

Alternately, skin grafts can be harvested from distant sites (eg around the ear or neck) and secured into the tumour excision defect. These grafts have to develop a new blood supply from the base and edges of the defect into which they are placed.

 

This patient had a recurrent Basal Cell Carcinoma just below the right nostril. It was excised and repaired with a flap from adjacent tissue beside the nose.

 

Result five days after surgery: The skin laxity in the donor area beside the nose is moved to the area of the skin defect resulting from the tumour excision.

 

This patient had an area of Basal Cell Carcinoma on the ear. Although the tumour was only small in size, there is not sufficient local tissue to allow the wound edges to be simply sutured (stitched) together.

Flap is sutured (stitched) into position at end of operation  
 
Jonathan Stretch Plastic Surgeon D.Phil (Oxon) F.R.A.C.S.