Chimeric anterolateral thigh flap in skull base reconstruction: A case-based update and literature review

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Abstract

Oncologic and traumatic neurosurgery may have to cope with the issue of skull base defects, which are associated with increased risk of meningitis, epidural abscess and cerebro-spinal fluid (CSF) leak. The aim of skull base reconstruction is to repair the dural exposure and to separate the intracranial contents from the nonsterile sino-nasal cavities and extracranial space. Currently, many different surgical techniques have been described, and one of the most performed is the use free flap. In the present paper we performed a case-based update and literature review of the use of chimeric anterolateral thigh free flap harvested from rectus femoris, reporting the case of a 68-year-old man with recurrent spheno-ethmoidalis plane meningioma.

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Auricchio, A. M., Mazzucchi, E., Rapisarda, A., Sabatino, G., Della Pepa, G. M., Visconti, G., … La Rocca, G. (2021). Chimeric anterolateral thigh flap in skull base reconstruction: A case-based update and literature review. Brain Sciences, 11(8). https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci11081076

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