muscle flap - traducción al árabe
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muscle flap - traducción al árabe

SPECIFIC KIND OF SURGICAL FLAP
Free Flap/Free Tissue Transfer; Free Flap; Free tissue transfer; Free muscle transfer; Skin flap; Double tangent advancement flap; U-flap; Double tangent advancement flaps; Mustarde flap; Free tissue flap

muscle flap      
‎ سَديلَةٌ عَضَلِيَّة‎
advancement flap         
  • Breast reconstruction using the latissimus dorsi muscle and an implant. This is an example of a pedicled musculocutaneous flap.
  • The distribution of the blood vessels in the skin of the sole of the foot. The dermis is referred to as corium.
  • [[Walter Yeo]], the first person to receive plastic surgery, before (left) and after(right) skin [[flap surgery]] performed by Sir Harold Delf Gillies in 1917. The surgery was some of the first to use a skin flap from an unaffected area of the body and paved the way for a sudden rash of improvements in this field.
TECHNIQUE IN PLASTIC AND RECONSTRUCTIVE SURGERY
User:Taylornate/Flap; User:Taylornate/Surgical flap; User:Taylornate/Flap (surgical); User:Taylornate/Flap surgery; Flap surgery; Advancement flap
‎ سَديلَةٌ تَقْديمِيَّة,سَديلَةٌ انْزِلاَقِيَّة‎
skin flap         
‎ سَديلَةٌ جِلْدِيَّة‎

Definición

smooth muscle
¦ noun Physiology muscle tissue in which the contractile fibrils are not highly ordered, occurring in the gut and other internal organs and not under voluntary control. Often contrasted with striated muscle.

Wikipedia

Free flap

The terms free flap, free autologous tissue transfer and microvascular free tissue transfer are synonymous terms used to describe the "transplantation" of tissue from one site of the body to another, in order to reconstruct an existing defect. "Free" implies that the tissue is completely detached from its blood supply at the original location ("donor site") and then transferred to another location ("recipient site") and the circulation in the tissue re-established by anastomosis of artery(s) and vein(s). This is in contrast to a "pedicled" flap in which the tissue is left partly attached to the donor site ("pedicle") and simply transposed to a new location; keeping the "pedicle" intact as a conduit to supply the tissue with blood.

Various types of tissue may be transferred as a "free flap" including skin and fat, muscle, nerve, bone, cartilage (or any combination of these), lymph nodes and intestinal segments. An example of "free flap" could be a "free toe transfer" in which the great toe or the second toe is transferred to the hand to reconstruct a thumb.

For all "free flaps", the blood supply is reconstituted using microsurgical techniques to reconnect the artery (brings blood into the flap) and vein (allows blood to flow out of the flap).

Free autologous tissue transfer is performed by many surgical specialties.