RESUMO
Liposuction is a safe method for the treatment of lipodystrophy. It gives good results in relation to body contours, especially when the superficial and deep layers of the superficial fascia are aspirated. The authors present clinical cases of female patients who underwent liposuction of the abdomen, flanks, and back in which superficial and deep liposuction was used. In the immediate postoperative period, these patients presented a skin pattern of marbled appearance, involving rosy-purplish stains intermingled with other whitish stains on the skin in the areas subjected to surgery and resembling the cutis marmorata described in the literature. Even 1 year after the operation, the stains had not receded. The literature mentions cases of cutaneous necrosis provoked by a temperature increase induced by liposuction cannulas. This trauma said to be the determining factor for local lesions of the subdermal plexus. However, no cases involving lesions of this plexus attributable to mechanical trauma from cannulas are cited. According to several authors, it is important during superficial liposuction to maintain a strip about 1 cm thick under the deep dermis for the preservation of the arterial plexus of the skin. This would avoid the formation of a skin pattern resembling cutis marmorata.
Assuntos
Tecido Adiposo/cirurgia , Lipectomia/efeitos adversos , Transtornos da Pigmentação/etiologia , Abdome/cirurgia , Adulto , Dorso/cirurgia , Feminino , Humanos , Perna (Membro)/cirurgia , Lipectomia/métodosRESUMO
During surgical procedures on the epidermis, either aesthetic or reconstructive, the medical literature shows that certain technical standards and skin flap proportions should be followed, unless the risk of necrosis increases, in different degrees, directly related to the trauma. This study evaluates the evolution of skin flaps on the dorsum of rats treated with a vitamin pool (VP) (vitamins A, E, and C). Twenty-six rats, divided into two groups, were used: (A) the treated group (13 specimens), in which we performed a dorsal skin flap and applied the VP, and (B) the control group (13 specimens), in which we performed a flap on the dorsum without application of the VP. Our results demonstrate that, at the macroscopic level, the group treated with the VP had more tissue sufferance, whereas at the microscopic level, small statistical differences were observed between the groups and also between the vertex and the middle of the flap. Despite these small differences, better results were obtained in group A, showing that in this study the clinical aspect did not correspond to the histological features.