Extended Latissimus Dorsi Flaps
The latissimus dorsi is a large quadrilateral muscle on the back.
The latissimus dorsi is a large quadrilateral muscle on the back.
The extended latissimus dorsi flap (ELD) involves harvesting the fat surrounding the muscle and gives more volume than the standard flap, which uses the muscle alone.
The standard flap is suitable to fill a partial breast defect following a wide local excision but when it is used as to reconstruct the breast following mastectomy, an implant is always required beneath the flap to give sufficient volume. The extended flap can be used without an implant to reconstruct a small breast (around a B cup). For a larger breast reconstruction, an implant may be needed, or alternatively, fat injections can be performed at a later stage to increase the size of the reconstructed breast.
The benefit of using your own tissue rather than an implant is that the look and feel of the breast is more natural than with an implant alone and there are none of the limitations and complications associated with implant surgery. The operation is always done under a general anaesthetic and the average length of hospital stay is 5 days.
This lady has had a left mastectomy for breast cancer and an immediate reconstruction with an extended latissimus dorsi flap from her back with no need for an implant. She has gone on to have a nipple reconstruction and fat grafting to her reconstructed breast. The result is shown at 1 year following the original surgery.
This lady has had a right mastectomy for breast cancer and immediate reconstruction with an extended latissimus dorsi flap from her back and no need for an implant. She has gone on to have a left balancing breast reduction, fat grafting to her right reconstructed breast and a right nipple reconstruction. This is the result 2 years following her original surgery.
A latissimus dorsi flap (LD flap) is a muscle flap taken from the back. The traditional LD flap is used to drape over an implant when doing a breast reconstruction and the flap itself does not carry much volume and so an implant is always needed. An extended latissimus dorsi flap (ELD) involves harvesting extra fat from the back when raising the muscle and this carries more volume with it. This means that it is possible to reconstruct a smaller breast with an ELD flap alone and no implant, or if an implant is used, then there is more tissue to cover it.
An ELD flap is more technically demanding than an LD flap and there are more potential complications with the donor site on the back, but in my view it is superior to the LD flap and so I almost always use an ELD flap for breast reconstruction. The only time I use an LD flap is if I were resurfacing the chest wall for an advanced cancer and so I would be more interested in simply obtaining cover for the chest rather than providing volume to recreate a breast.
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