Abstract
Background:
Head and neck ablative surgery can impose aesthetic disfigurement, particularly when severe color mismatch exists between native and reconstructed facial skin. To date, the accuracy, objectivity, and modifiability of facial skin color matching remains poorly understood.
Objective:
To measure skin color match outcomes after head and neck reconstruction using handheld colorimetry.
Methods:
Patients undergoing complex head and neck reconstruction involving facial skin were included. A variety of skin paddle donor sites were studied, including split-thickness skin graft (STSG) placement over myocutaneous or adipofasciocutaneous free flaps after de-epithelization. Skin color match (deltaE) was measured during follow-up using a handheld colorimeter.
Results:
Forty-seven patients were included, with median age 69. The most common flap type was the anterolateral thigh (n = 31, 66%). Twenty patients underwent STSG to the skin paddle. DeltaE measurements among the patients with STSGs demonstrated better color match (lowest deltaE), compared with patients with unaltered skin paddles (3.4 ± 1.0 vs. 6.5 ± 2.5, p < 0.0001).
Conclusion:
We found the use of STSGs over de-epithelialized myogenous or adipofasciocutaneous flaps improves color match, as measured by handheld colorimetry.
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Supplementary Material
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