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Title: Reconstructive options after cancer surgery of the breast. Author: Lejour M. Journal: Eur J Surg Oncol; 1989 Dec; 15(6):496-503. PubMed ID: 2689235. Abstract: Breast cancer is now treated either by conservative therapy or by mastectomy. In the first case, no reconstruction is usually necessary, although some patients require additional surgery for asymmetry, distortion or even severe damage, by surgery or radiotherapy, of the treated breast. In these cases, reconstructive surgery should be performed very carefully, taking full account of the risk of operating in irradiated tissues. Minor procedures are usually adequate, but major surgery, reconstruction with abdominal flap, is sometimes the only solution to solve difficult postradiotherapy disasters. When a mastectomy is the choice of the patient and the surgeon, immediate reconstruction is now performed more often than before, as expansive prostheses are now available, allowing immediate implantation without endangering the skin flaps. In most cases of mastectomy, however, reconstruction is performed as a secondary procedure, in two stages if possible (volume and symmetry after the first, areola after the second). Most of the reconstructions are done by simple implantation of a prosthesis. When local conditions require a flap, the latissimus dorsi musculocutaneous has been the best choice for years, but the lower rectus flap is now taking over, as it gives the advantage of reconstructing a breast with autologous tissue.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]