Creative thinking in medicine
The need for good haemostasis is felt in surgery in general, and in
plastic and aesthetic surgery in particular. Optimal haemostasis favours the
ongoing search for ever-greater precision in surgical operations and
facilitates the early phases of the scarring process. In addition, it
shortens healing times. In the literature that we consulted, we found a
proposal for biological supplementation with platelet-enriched plasma
obtained after centrifugation of about 60 ml of autologous whole blood for
between 15 and 30 minutes. At the end of a face-lifting operation, the
enriched plasma is injected under the flaps obtained by blunt dissection,
with a view to reducing post-operative bleeding, thereby minimising swelling
and bruising (1).
In an attempt to work out a technique that could facilitate haemostasis in
the operating phase, and not only in the post-operative period, we
experimented with a biological preparation that can be produced more easily
than enriched plasma: autologous serum obtained by means of high-velocity
centrifugation, diluted in a solution containing, or not containing, a local
anaesthetic. Preparation is simple and rapid. A sample of blood is placed in
one or more 6 ml test tubes, without additives, and centrifuged for 6-15
minutes. We usually add this autologous serum to an anaesthetic solution
containing epinephrine, in variable proportions according to the type of
anaesthesia required and the type of operation to be performed. The ratio
used in transconjunctival and upper blepharoplasty, for instance, is1:4.
The results appear to be noteworthy. Tissue incision and dissection have
been greatly facilitated by the almost total absence of bleeding. Swelling
and ecchymoses in the immediate post-operative phase have been markedly
reduced (fig. 1). In some of our tests, we have compared the administration
of local anaesthetic alone with that of the anaesthetic supplemented with
autologous serum in the same patient, for example in blepharoplasty. A
significant difference was noted, both during the operation and in the
post-operative period. When the supplemented solution was used, haemostasis
proved to be immediate.
We feel it is plausible that this improvement in haemostasis is due to the
local addition of coagulation factors present in the autologous serum (prothrombin,
thromboplastin, calcium and factors VII, VIII, IX, XI, XII) to the intrinsic
and extrinsic pathways. Further advantages of using serum emerge from a
recent report in The Lancet of research conducted by a group of British
plastic surgeons (2). In experimental models of wound healing, these authors
found that the synthesis of collagen and fundamental substance by skin
fibroblasts in the scarring phase was stimulated by the addition of collagen
and serum, and that the epithelial cells were activated and assumed a
polarised appearance. These effects were not produced by the addition of
collagen and plasma. This suggests that, as well as promoting haemostasis,
serum exerts a regenerative effect on tissues undergoing scarring.
The technique described may well be refined further and extended to other
uses. For example, we also add autologous serum to the centrifuged fat
that is injected during lipofilling (ratio 1:4), and greater dilution ratios
are currently being tested. In the future, a simple centrifuge for 6 ml
test-tubes is likely to become a standard piece of equipment in many
operating theatres.
1) Miller P. J., Constantinides M., Doud Galli S. K. Midfacial effects
of the deep-plane facelift. Facial Plastic Surgery 2001; 17 n° 1:
49-56.
2) Henry G, Li W, Garner W, Woodley DT. Migration of human keratinocytes in
plasma and serum and wound re-epithelialisation. Lancet 2003 Feb 15;361
(9357) : 574-6.
The film footage demonstrates each phase of the method, from the high-velocity centrifugation of a small amount of the patient's blood to its practical application in a transconjunctival blepharoplasty operation carried out by means of Timedsurgery. The results three days after upper and lower blepharoplasty operations are shown. The region of the eye-lid, which is critical with regard to bleeding, oedema and ecchymosis, constituted an excellent testing ground for the method. The results also feature a face seen three days after lipofilling.
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