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The feasibility of tissue expansion in reconstruction of congenital and aquired deformities of pediatric patients.

Skin expansion is one of the major developments in reconstructive surgery. The use of tissue expansion has been popularized among plastic surgeons and has become the treatment method of choice for many congenital and acquired defects in a wide variety of diseases in adults and then later in children. The authors analyze their clinical experience in the treatment of burn scars and complex defects by tissue expansion in pediatric patients. The study included thirty five expansion procedures performed in 25 patients. Smooth surface expanders with a remote valve were used in the scalp (22), face (2), neck (3), hand (2), thorax (2), breast (1), palate (2), abdomen (1). Self-inflating osmotic tissue expanders were used in four patients, one of them had cleft palate and the other two of them had congenital hand anomalies and the last one had frontal scar and alopecia in the frontal hairline. In 19 out of 25 cases (76%) tissue expansion was achieved without complications. At the same time, in 1 cases minor complications and in 5 cases major complications occurred. The number of expanders per patient was only one in 16 cases. More than one expander was used to remove parts of the same injury in 9 cases. Our study may help to draw attention again on different aspects in tissue expansion and critically focus on each step of the tissue expansion both using self-filling tissue expanders and smooth surface tissue expanders with a remote valve.

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