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Advancing indocyanine green fluorescence flap perfusion assessment via near infrared signal quantification.
Dalli, J; Reilly, F; Epperlein, J P; Potter, S; Cahill, R.
Affiliation
  • Dalli J; UCD Centre for Precision Surgery, School of Medicine, UCD, Dublin, Ireland.
  • Reilly F; Department of Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery, Mater Misericordiae University Hospital, Dublin, Ireland.
  • Epperlein JP; IBM Research Europe, Dublin, Ireland.
  • Potter S; Department of Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery, Mater Misericordiae University Hospital, Dublin, Ireland.
  • Cahill R; UCD School of Medicine, UCD, Dublin, Ireland.
JPRAS Open ; 41: 203-214, 2024 Sep.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39050743
ABSTRACT

Introduction:

Intraoperative indocyanine green fluorescence angiography (ICGFA) perfusion assessment has been demonstrated to reduce complications in reconstructive surgery. This study sought to advance ICGFA flap perfusion assessment via quantification methodologies.

Method:

Patients undergoing pedicled and free flap reconstruction were subjected to intraoperative ICGFA flap perfusion assessment using either an open or endoscopic system. Patient demographics, clinical impact of ICGFA and outcomes were documented. From the ICGFA recordings, fluorescence signal quality, as well as inflow/outflow milestones for the flap and surrounding (control) tissue were computationally quantified post hoc and compared on a region of interest (ROI) level. Further software development intended full flap quantification, metric computation and heatmap generation.

Results:

Fifteen patients underwent ICGFA assessment at reconstruction (8 head and neck, 6 breast and 1 perineum) including 10 free and 5 pedicled flaps. Visual ICGFA interpretation altered on-table management in 33.3% of cases, with flap edges trimmed in 4 and a re-anastomosis in 1 patient. One patient suffered post-operative flap dehiscence. Laparoscopic camera use proved feasible but recorded a lower quality signal than the open system.Using established and novel metrics, objective ICGFA signal ROI quantification permitted perfusion comparisons between the flap and surrounding tissue. Full flap assessment feasibility was demonstrated by computing all pixels and subsequent outputs summarisation as heatmaps.

Conclusion:

This trial demonstrated the feasibility and potential for ICGFA with operator based and quantitative flap perfusion assessment across several reconstructive applications. Further development and implementation of these computational methods requires technique and device standardisation.
Key words

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Language: En Journal: JPRAS Open Year: 2024 Document type: Article Affiliation country: Ireland Country of publication: Netherlands

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Language: En Journal: JPRAS Open Year: 2024 Document type: Article Affiliation country: Ireland Country of publication: Netherlands