The Recovery of Sensory Function Following Skin Flaps in Humans
- 1 March 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
- Vol. 79 (3) , 428-433
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00006534-198703000-00021
Abstract
Two cross-sectional studies were made of the recovery of tactile and pain sensitivity in subjects having skin flaps in the region of the chest and neck as a result of tumor excision. In experiment 1, stimuli ranging from 2.46 to 17.10 gm of force were deliverd by von Frey hairs to the flaps and comparable normal sites in 35 subjects at times ranging from 1 month to 10 years after surgery. No subjects perceived stimuli of less than 11.80 gm, thermal, or moving touch applied to flaps, whereas 21 percent perceived 11.80 gm or greater force (judged as painful applied to normal skin). The results of experiment 2 showed that these findings were not due to visual information available to subjects. Possible explanations for the fact that these results are radically different from those reported in the literature are discussed.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Properties of mechanoreceptive fibres serving skin grafts transferred to the hands of adult baboons (Papio anubis).The Journal of Physiology, 1984
- Sensations from Surgically Transferred Glabrous Skin; Central Versus Peripheral FactorsCanadian Journal of Neurological Sciences, 1979
- INNERVATION OF SKIN GRAFTS1967
- THE RETURN OF PAIN SENSIBILITY IN FULL THICKNESS SKIN GRAFTSBrain, 1952