RESUMO
BACKGROUND: Fat grafting is used in combination with mammoplasty to improve filling of the upper pole of the breasts. Its effectiveness remains in question due to unpredictable results. Difficulty in isolating the grafted fat and differentiating it from host tissues may hinder assessment of graft integration. The plane between the pectoral muscles is free of fat and has already been described with respect to placement of breast implants and fat grafting in breast surgeries. This study sought to evaluate via magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) the integration and retention of retropectoral fat grafts in mammoplasty. METHODS: Thirty patients with breast flaccidity who desired to undergo mammoplasty were selected. Fat collected from the abdomen was separated by sedimentation and transferred to the retropectoral region after undermining of the breast and resection of excess tissue. The patients underwent MRI preoperatively and at three and six months after surgery. Fat volumes were calculated by multiplying the values for the major vertical, horizontal, and anteroposterior axes by the constant 0.523. RESULTS: Twenty-five patients completed the study. The mean volume grafted was 116.4 ± 22.5 ml per breast. Six months after surgery, the mean fat graft volume in the retropectoral plane was 48.1 ± 25.71 ml, and the integration rate was 40.82% (range, 32.2-49.4%). The rate of complications related to fat grafting was 8%. CONCLUSIONS: In mammoplasty, retropectoral fat grafting showed good integration rates and is a safe and predictable approach that can contribute to improving the outcomes of aesthetic and reconstructive breast surgeries. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE IV, COHORT ANALYTIC STUDY: This journal requires that authors assign a level of evidence to each article. For a full description of these Evidence-Based Medicine ratings, please refer to the Table of Contents or the online Instructions to Authors www.springer.com/00266 .
Assuntos
Sobrevivência de Enxerto , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , HumanosRESUMO
A 46-year-old man with bicuspid aortic valve and severe calcific aortic stenosis was submitted to aortic valve replacement with a stented bioprosthesis. He developed Staphylococcus epidermidis prosthetic valve endocarditis a month later, presenting in the emergency room with acute myocardial infarction. The mechanism of myocardial ischemia was a large aortic root abscess causing left main extrinsic compression. He was urgently taken to the operating room, and an aortic root replacement with cryopreserved homograft was performed, associated with autologous pericardium patch closure of aortic to right atrium fistula and coronary artery bypass grafting of the left anterior descending. After a difficult postoperative period with multiple problems, he was eventually discharged home. At 36-month follow-up, he is asymptomatic with no recurrent infection, and the left main coronary artery is widely patent on control chest computed tomography.