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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog palate fistula repaired with angularis oris buccal flap

By Bryant, Karen J et al.·Published in Veterinary surgery : VS·2003·Department of Surgical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Angularis oris axial pattern buccal flap for reconstruction of recurrent fistulae of the palate.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Two dogs with recurring holes in their mouths, known as oronasal fistulae, were treated using a special surgical technique involving a flap of tissue from the cheek. One dog healed completely six months after the surgery, while the second dog, which had a fistula due to previous radiation treatment, saw about 95% healing but still had a small area that didn’t fully close. This method, using a flap based on the angularis oris artery, proved to be a successful option for repairing challenging palate defects.

People also search for: dog mouth hole treatment · oronasal fistula repair in dogs · canine palate surgery recovery

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe the use of an axial pattern flap based on the angularis oris artery and vein for reconstruction of palate defects. STUDY DESIGN: Clinical case report ANIMALS: Two dogs with recurrent oronasal fistulae. METHODS: Oronasal fistulae previously treated by buccal mucosal random pattern flaps that subsequently dehisced were repaired using an angularis oris-based buccal tissue axial pattern flap. This flap was developed by full thickness incision of the cheek tissue, excluding the skin, about the angularis oris vascular pedicle resulting in a vascularized flap covered by oral mucosa on one side. RESULTS: In one dog, the repair was intact and healed 6 months after surgery. In the second dog with a fistula that resulted because of radiation necrosis, approximately 95% of the defect healed with a small (<1.0 cm(2)) area of dehiscence. Repair of this persistent fistula with a random pattern buccal flap failed and this small fistula remained with minimal clinical signs. CONCLUSION: An axial pattern flap based on the angularis oris artery and vein can be used to repair difficult or recurrent palate defects. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Angularis oris axial pattern flaps provide an additional effective option for repair of defects in the hard and soft palate to the distal gingival margin of the canine tooth or beyond, depending on skull conformation. Advantages of this flap include its highly vascular and robust character, high degree of mobility and a surface of tough buccal mucosa.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/12692755/