Abstract
Recovery of sensitivity to cold, warmth and pain caused by excessive heat in various types of free microvascular flaps was studied psychophysically in 27 patients who had undergone such operations four months to four years earlier. A thermal stimulator based on the Peltier principle and controlled by a microprocessor was used to measure the sensitivity to temperature in the transplants. The results were compared with the measured thresholds in the opposite sites in corresponding normal body areas. The present study showed that sensitivity to cold, warmth, and pain caused by excessive heat did return to some free microvascular flaps. According to the measurements the sensation started to return after 6 months in some flaps, and all types of thermal stimuli were felt by one patient as early as 10 months after operation. The return was more pronounced in younger people and in smaller flaps. If the hands, feet, or head defects were reconstructed with a thin skin flap (posterior aspect of thigh, dorsum of foot, or subscapular) the recovery of sensitivity was verified. Sensation returned to the musculocutaneous and osteomusculocutaneous transfers if they were on the hands or the head, or if they were sutured to healthy tissue with normal sensation. The main advantage of the psychophysical sensory testing method that we used is that it gave exact numerical data that made it possible to compare results among the different patient groups and even those obtained at different clinics and laboratories.