Reconstruction of a Gunshot-Caused Mouth Floor Defect Using a Nasolabial Flap and a De-Epithelialized V-Y Advancement Flap

J Craniofac Surg. 2021 May 1;32(3):1110-1114. doi: 10.1097/SCS.0000000000006967.

Abstract

We present reconstruction of a gunshot-caused mouth floor defect using a nasolabial flap and a de-epithelialized V-Y advancement flap.A 58-year-old man presented 14 days after bullet injury passed from anterior chin to the right postauricular area. Upon examination, the central incisors, alveolar bones, and soft tissues of the mouth floor were lost. Bone fragments and failed miniplates were exposed. Pus discharge filled the defect.On the 23rd post-trauma day, right unilateral nasolabial flap was used to cover the oral side of the mouth floor. This flap was centered on the nasolabial fold and its base was situated on the commissure of the lips. The flap was raised in the soft tissue, just superficial to the facial muscles, transferred into the oral cavity through an incision made in the cheek mucosa, and sutured to the margin of the defect. A de-epithelialized dermal and subcutaneous flap was used to reconstruct the deep portion of the mouth floor through the V-Y advancement method. At the lower border of the mandible, a 3-cm-wide V-Y advancement flap was designed. The de-epithelized portion was inserted into the mouth floor and sutured to the defect margin. On 30th post-trauma day, left commissure-based buccal mucosal flap was used for the gingivobuccal sulcus defect. The apex was near the retromolar trigone. The elevated flap was transferred to the lower gingivobuccal sulcus defect. On POD 28, the nasolabial flap and commissure-based buccal myomucosal flap was divided and inset respectively.These flaps can be used for moderate-sized mouth floor defects.

Publication types

  • Case Reports

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Lip / surgery
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Mouth
  • Mouth Floor / surgery
  • Mouth Mucosa
  • Mouth Neoplasms* / surgery
  • Plastic Surgery Procedures*
  • Surgical Flaps