|

DIEP Flap

|The Deep Inferior Epigastric Perforator (DIEP) flap,
is a microsurgical procedure used for breast reconstruction. This
procedure, in the appropriate patient, is Dr. Rosenberg’s
preferred method for breast reconstruction. With
this procedure, the patient is able to use her own abdominal
tissue for breast reconstruction without the sacrifice
of the abdominal musculature required in the TRAM flap
procedure.
Small
blood vessels course through the substance of the Rectus
abdominus (six-pack) muscle to provide blood supply to
the skin and fat of the abdomen. This skin and fat
is typically removed in women seeking cosmetic abdominoplasty
(tummy tuck surgery). In the DIEP procedure, the
blood vessels are traced through the muscle and then the
skin and fat of the abdomen are transferred to the chest
to reconstruct the breast. This requires that these
small blood vessels (2-3 mm in diameter) be sewn to blood
vessels in the chest using the surgical microscope. In
essence this is a transplantation of tissue from the abdomen
to the chest in order to reconstruct the breast lost to
breast cancer.
The
advantages of this type of reconstruction are numerous. First,
it allows a woman to replace the skin and fat of the breast
tissue with similar tissue from the abdomen. In most
cases this provides the most natural appearing and feeling
reconstructed breast. The transplanted tissue will
gain and lose weight, and will most closely mimic a natural
breast on the other side. Once the reconstruction
is complete, there are no required procedures for maintenance
that one might have with implant-based reconstruction. Also,
the risks of abdominal complications of hernia or bulge
often seen in the traditional TRAM flap are minimized.
The
DIEP procedure can be performed at the same time as mastectomy
(immediate reconstruction) or as a delayed reconstruction
after other cancer therapies are complete. The length
of the DIEP operation is typically 4-6 hours and the hospital
stay is typically 3-5 days.
While
breast reconstruction does involve risks inherent to surgical
procedures, selecting a surgeon who routinely performs microsurgical
breast reconstruction minimizes these risks.
|