Official Site of the U.S. Air Force   Right Corner Banner
Join the Air Force

News > Feature - Air Force surgeons pioneer surgery procedure at Bagram hospital
 
Photos 
Air Force surgeons perform first successful free-flap surgery at Bagram hospital
Surgical team members Maj. (Dr.) Christopher Dress, Maj. (Dr.) Dmitry Tuder and Airman 1st Class Angelia Sneed perform a free-flap operation on a 9-year-old girl suffering from a badly mangled leg. The procedure was the team's first free-flap operation at the Craig Joint Theater Hospital at Bagram Air Base, Afghanistan. (U.S. Air Force photo)
Download HiRes
 
Related Stories
 Congressional delegation observes enemy fire from C-130  - 9/5/2007
Air Force surgeons pioneer surgery procedure at Bagram hospital

Posted 8/28/2007 Email story   Print story

    


by Maj. (Dr.) Christopher M. Dress
Task Force Med Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeon


8/28/2007 - SOUTHWEST ASIA (AFPN) -- In Afghanistan, a country plagued by a long history of violence and untold numbers of hidden land mines, limb-threatening injuries occur on a daily basis. For decades, the answer to this tragedy has been the preservation of life over limb by amputation.

The presence of open fractures with large soft tissue defects, where there is not enough muscle, fat, and skin to cover the broken bone, leaves few treatment options. Wound infections are common when soft tissue coverage is missing and amputation is often the only way to prevent the spread of infection and to save the patient's life.

With the opening of the new Craig Joint Theater Hospital at Bagram Air Base, and under the leadership of Task Force Med, there is now a medical facility in Afghanistan that is capable of providing state-of-the-art surgical care in a combat theater environment.

Microsurgical free tissue transfer is one of the state-of-the-art techniques that is now available at the CJTH. This complex surgical procedure allows surgeons to move a block of tissue from one part of the patient's body to another injured part in order to achieve a functional and aesthetic reconstruction.

Microsurgical free tissue transfers, or free flaps, allow patients to heal much more quickly and with less overall deformity or loss of pre-injury function than other reconstructive techniques. These blocks of tissue may include only a single tissue, such as muscle or bone, or composite tissues, such as muscle, fat and skin en bloc, to replace multiple missing tissues at an injury site.

In contrast to a simple skin graft, where skin is donated from one part of the body and laid over a wound at another site, a free tissue transfer requires the sewing of blood vessels and sometimes nerves that are often smaller than one millimeter in diameter. This requires magnification, extremely small sutures and excellent surgical dexterity.

A free tissue transfer operation may take eight hours or more and, in many respects, is more difficult than an organ transplant. The motivation for performing this complex operation at CJTH is to avoid limb amputation by providing optimal wound coverage for the injured extremity.

Five microsurgical free tissue transfers have been performed recently at CJTH. The first operation was performed on a 9-year-old girl where one of the 'six-pack' muscles of her abdomen, the rectus abdominis muscle, was transferred to her badly mangled leg.

The second operation involved the transfer of one of the back muscles, the latissimus dorsi muscle, of a 60-year-old male patient, also to his injured leg. Yet another free tissue transfer involved moving the living fibula bone from one patient's leg to replace both missing bones in one his forearms, thereby preserving function and preventing its amputation.

All of these operations were successful, with the free flaps providing muscle coverage and blood supply to the underlying broken bones, allowing them to heal, and avoiding amputation. In the one case, the free flap was the bone itself, allowing the surgical team to replace actual missing skeletal structures. Several more candidates for this operation have been identified.

A thorough review of the surgical literature found no case reports or series previously published of free autologous tissue transfers performed in Afghanistan. Case reports of these same operations performed in the neighboring countries of Pakistan and Iran have been cited in the literature.

The team who performed these operations was assembled by the Task Force MED surgical flight commander, Maj. Brenda I. Waters, deployed from Yokota Air Base, Japan, and includes the following members: 

--  Maj. (Dr.) Christopher M. Dress, plastic and reconstructive surgery, deployed from Eglin Air Force Base, Fla.; 
-- Maj. (Dr.) Dmitry Tuder, orthopedic/hand surgery, deployed from Andrews AFB, Md.; 
-- Capt. Collis H. Lang, certified registered nurse anesthetist, deployed from Travis AFB, Calif.; 
-- 1st Lt. Sherry A. Veriato, operating room nurse, deployed from Travis AFB; 
-- Tech. Sgt. Joshua S. Leary, operating room NCO in charge, deployed from Davis-Monthan AFB, Ariz.; and 
--  Airman 1st Class Angelia M. Sneed, plastic surgery operating room technician, deployed from Travis AFB.

Comment on this story (comments may be published on Air Force Link)

View the comments/letters page



tabComments
No comments yet.  
Add a comment

 Inside AF.mil

ima cornerSearch

tabSubscribe AF.MIL
tabMore HeadlinesRSS feed 
Rescue Group Airmen pull hiker from Arizona mountain range

AF provides special counsel to sexual assault survivors

Afghan air force improves casualty evacuation capability

F-35 ITF works toward night, weather certification

Commissaries plan for Mondays furlough  1

AF leaders remind force to be safe this summer  1

DOD firefighter certification program turns 20  1

Director details furlough plans for DOD schools

New under secretary visits Joint Base San Antonio

Hagel emphasizes summer safety in message to Department

Air Force leaders send Memorial Day message  2

KC-46A training, operational bases, alternatives selected  8

AF 7 Summits team scales Everest

Tinker AFB aircraft return to Oklahoma after diverting to Arizona   1

tabCommentaryRSS feed 
Ordering monkey food  3

Only fools sit around wishing for good old days  23


Site Map      Contact Us     Questions     USA.gov     Security and Privacy notice     E-publishing  
Suicide Prevention      Sexual Assault Awareness & Prevention     FOIA     IG   EEO