Zusammenfassung
BackgroundDemographic change implies that the human population is getting older and the elderly are living longer. Consequently, achieving good functional and aesthetic outcomes in microvascular procedures, especially in very old patients with higher incidence of atherosclerosis and vessel calcifications, constitutes a microsurgical challenge. This study evaluates the feasibility of microsurgical ...
Zusammenfassung
BackgroundDemographic change implies that the human population is getting older and the elderly are living longer. Consequently, achieving good functional and aesthetic outcomes in microvascular procedures, especially in very old patients with higher incidence of atherosclerosis and vessel calcifications, constitutes a microsurgical challenge. This study evaluates the feasibility of microsurgical procedures in a very old patient cohort. Patients and MethodsBetween 2009 and 2015, 754 patients underwent 838 free flap reconstructions. The patients were divided into two groups according to age in middle-aged (<80 years old; n=711) or very old (80 years old; n=43). The series was retrospectively analyzed regarding potential influence of medical comorbidities, surgical and medical complications and outcomes. ResultsBetween the groups, there was a significant difference regarding comorbidities with a higher prevalence of hypertension (P<0.0001) and peripheral artery disease (P<0.0001) in the very old group. However, there was no significant difference regarding the rate of surgical or medical complications, flap failure (middle aged group 43/791 flaps (5.44%) versus very old group 4/47 flaps (8.51%); P=0.328), and revision rate (117/791 flaps (14.79%) versus 6/47 flaps (12.77%); P=0.834) between the patient groups during our 3-months follow-up period. ConclusionOur findings suggest that despite higher rates of patient comorbidities, successful free tissue transfer can also be achieved in a very old population with acceptable risk for complications.