KEY NOTES CHAPTER 9: AESTHETIC SURGERY - Liposuction & Lipofilling. Flashcards

0
Q

What is the fat distribution in the neck?

A

Supraplatysmal (subcutaneous).
- can liposuck

Subplatysmal.
- excise (safer) or lipo

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1
Q

Describe the layers of subcutaneous fat.

A

3 layers

  1. Apical
    - immediately deep to reticular dermis.
    - fat surrounds sweat glands, hair follicles, blood and lymphatics.
    - injury to this layer results in serum, erythema, pigment change and skin necrosis.
  2. Mantle
    - columnar fat cells within vertical fibrous stroma.
    - not present in eyelids, nail beds, dorsal of nose or penis.
  3. Deep
    - between mantle layer and deep fascia.
    - main target of liposuction.
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2
Q

What is the fat distribution in the abdomen?

A

Camper’s fascia - fat within loose fibrinous network.

Scarpa’s fascia (lower abdomen) - sub-Scarpa’s fat.

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3
Q

Where is fat distributed in the hips and flanks?

A

The superficial fascial system divides fat into superficial and deep layers.
Zones of adherence connect SFS to muscle fascia at:
- gluteal crease
- distal thigh
- males: iliac crest (deep fat confined to abdomen)
females: lower than iliac crest (deep fat around hips).

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4
Q

Where is fat distributed in the lower leg?

A
  • almost all fat is in mantle layer, with no deep layer.
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5
Q

How are patients assessed for liposuction?

A
Skin quality, elasticity, striae, wrinkles, laxity, dimpling, scars, cellulite (tethering of fibrous septa on skin, may worsen after liposuction).
BMI.
Circumference.
Gentle pinching.
Hernial orifices (abdomen)
Intra-abdominal vs subcutaneous fat.
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6
Q

How do you offer pre-op counselling?

A
  • GA (LA).
  • small incisions.
  • compression garments postop 6wks.
  • off work 1 wk.
  • back to normal activity 4 weeks.
  • up to 6 months for swelling to subside.
  • can gain weight again.
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7
Q

What are the complications of liposuction?

A

up to 20% patients are dissatisfied due to:
- over / under correction.
- asymmetry.
- visible ridges, pitting, cobblestoning, rippling.
- sagging / bulging skin
troublesome scars.
- seroma infection, contour irregularity

Early

  • paraesthesiae, hypersensitivity, numbness (transient usually).
  • PE, fat embolism or DVT.
  • hypovolaemia / fluid overload (pulmonary oedema).
  • lidocaine toxicity.
  • intra-abdominal, retroperioteal perforation.
  • bleeding
  • burns, friction injuries
  • severe infection (NF/TSS)

Late

  • persistent contour irregularities.
  • pigmentation changes.
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8
Q

What different techniques of liposuction do you know of?

A

Dry - substantial bruising & blood loss.
Wet - 200-300ml infiltrate per area. <30% blood loss of the aspirate.
Superwet 1:1 - 1% blood loss, less associated risks.
Tumescent 3:1 (Klein) - <1% blood loss.

Suction assisted.
Power-assisted.
Ultrasound-assisted.
Radiofrequency-assisted.

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9
Q

What types of wetting solutions do you know?

A

Klein’s solution

  • 1L normal saline
  • 500-1000mg lidocaine
  • 0.65mg epinephrine
  • 10mEq/l sodium bicarb.

Hunstadt’s solution

  • 1L Ringer’s lactate
  • 500mg lidocaine
  • 1mg epinephrine.

Can use up to 35mg/kg lidocaine, be aware plasma levels peak 10-12hrs following this administration, and onset of toxicity may be delayed.

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10
Q

Take me through a liposuction procedure.

A
  • Patient is marked with concentric circles in upright position pre-op.
  • Avoid zones of adherence (mark).
  • make multiple stab incisions to allow cross-tunnelling and feathering.
    Pretunnelling
    Remove deeper fat first, then superficial if necessary with finer cannula with openings facing downwards.
    End-points of liposuction:
  • symmetry, shape and contour.
  • skin pinch <1 inch.
  • equal amounts of aspirate from each side.
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11
Q

Describe the different types of liposuction.

A

pg 569

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12
Q

Tell me about the history of fat transfer.

A

Neuber (1893) - fat graft from arm to face.
Czerny (1895) - lipoma from buttock for breast recon.
Hollaender (1910) - fat injection for facial atrophy.
Coleman (1997) - ‘liposculpture’.
Zuk (2001) - ADSCs in fat.
Rigotti (2007) - therapeutic effects of ADSCs on irradiated tissue.

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13
Q

What are the different cell types in adipose tissue?

A
  1. Mature adipocytes - very sensitive to environment and trauma.
  2. Preadipocytes - differentiate to mature adipocytes, fat graft survival largely dependent on their proliferation.
  3. ADSCs - can differentiate into all mesenchymal tissues: fat, bone, muscle, cartilage, blood vessels.

2 & 3 are predominantly found in stream vascular fraction of lipoaspirate.

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14
Q

What are the theories behind graft take?

A
  1. Cell survival theory
    - some transferred adipocytes survive.
  2. Host replacement theory
    - recruitment of host adipocytes at site of injection.
  3. Niche theory
    - cell’s physiology is regulated by it’s microenvironment (e.g. cell-cell interaction, ECM< endocrine and paracrine hormones), so stem cells differentiate according to their niche / host site.
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15
Q

Describe the process of lipofilling.

A
As standardised by Sydney Coleman.
1. Harvesting.
2.Refinement.
3. Placement.
With minimal trauma of small enough parcels of fat to inject and large enough to preserve tissue architecture.
16
Q

Describe the harvesting process.

A
  • abdo / flanks / medial thigh donor sites are injected with infiltrate (1:1).
  • blunt 3mm harvesting cannula is connected to 10ml Luer-Lok syringe with 2cc negative pressure applied when harvesting.
17
Q

Describe the refinement process.

A

plug is placed on end of syringe, plunger is removed and centrifuged at 3000rpm for 3mins.
3 layers are produced:
1. Supernatant: oil from damaged adipocytes.
2. Middle: fatty tissue.
3. Subnatant: removed by releasing plug.

18
Q

What other refinement processes have you heard of?

A
Sedimentation 
Filtration
Towel-processing
No-touch technique
Washing
19
Q

Describe the placement process.

A

Refined fat transferred to 1 or 3mm Luer Lok syringes, and injected with blunt cannulas.
Aim: to maximise contact between fat parcel and recipient tissues.
Coleman: in face, <0.1ml of fat infected for each passage of cannula.

20
Q

What are the possible complications of fat grafting?

A
  • infection.
  • swelling.
  • bruising.
  • over / under correction, contour irregularities.
  • fat resorption, fat necrosis, calcification, oil cysts.
  • intravascular injection -> fat embolus, PE, stroke, blindness.
  • donor site morbidity.