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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Vacuum-assisted closure helps heal large skin flap wound in dog

By Bristow, Poppy C et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2013·Queen Mother Hospital for Animals, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Use of vacuum-assisted closure to maintain viability of a skin flap in a dog.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 4-year-old male Labrador Retriever-Poodle mix was brought in with a large wound on his side that had not healed properly after surgery. The wound was infected, and the skin flap covering it was dying. The veterinarian used a treatment called vacuum-assisted closure (VAC) to help the wound heal, which involved applying a special dressing that promotes tissue growth. After a few days of VAC treatment, the flap showed significant improvement, and the dog healed completely without needing further surgery.

People also search for: dog wound healing treatment · vacuum-assisted closure for dogs · skin flap surgery recovery dog

Abstract

CASE DESCRIPTION: A 4-year-old sexually intact male Labrador Retriever-Poodle mix was admitted to the hospital for treatment of a wound in the left thoracic region. The wound had been debrided and primary closure had been performed by the referring veterinarian 4 days previously. CLINICAL FINDINGS: The dog had a 20-cm-long wound covered by a large flap of skin that extended caudally from the scapula over the left side of the thorax. A 3-cm defect was evident at the cranioventral aspect of the wound, from which purulent material was being discharged. The skin flap was necrotic, and the skin surrounding the flap was bruised. Signs of pain were elicited when the wound and surrounding region were palpated. Other findings, including those of thoracic radiography, were unremarkable. TREATMENT AND OUTCOME: The wound was debrided, and vacuum-assisted closure (VAC) was initiated for 3 days until a healthy bed of granulation tissue developed. A reconstructive procedure was performed with a rotation flap 3 days after VAC dressing removal. The VAC process was reinitiated 2 days following reconstruction because of an apparent failing of the skin flap viability. After 5 days of VAC, the flap had markedly improved in color and consistency and VAC was discontinued. Successful healing of the flap occurred without the need for debridement or additional intervention. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Use of VAC led to a good overall outcome for the dog, with complete healing achieved. Additional evaluation of this technique for salvaging failing skin flaps is warranted in dogs, particularly considering that no reliable method for flap salvage in veterinary species has been reported to date.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24004235/