Background: Native breast skin flap necrosis is a complication that can result from ischemic injury following mastectomy and can compromise immediate breast reconstruction. The tumescent mastectomy technique has been advocated as a method of allowing sharp dissection with decreased blood loss and perioperative analgesia. This study was performed to determine whether the technique increases the risk for skin flap necrosis in an immediate breast reconstruction setting.
Methods: Three hundred eighty consecutive mastectomies with immediate reconstruction over a 6-year period were reviewed and divided into 2 cohorts for comparison: 100 tumescent and 280 nontumescent mastectomy cases. The incidence of minor and major skin flap necrosis was evaluated.
Results: The use of tumescent mastectomy (odds ratio [OR], 3.93; P < .001), prior radiation (OR, 3.19; P = .011), patient age (OR, 1.59; P = .006), and body mass index (OR, 1.11; P = .004) were significant risk factors for developing postoperative major native skin flap necrosis.
Conclusions: The use of the tumescent mastectomy technique appears to be associated with a substantial increase in the risk for postoperative major skin flap necrosis in an immediate breast reconstruction setting.
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