Reconstructive plastic surgery is
performed to correct functional impairments caused by burns; traumatic
injuries, such as facial bone fractures and breaks; congenital abnormalities,
such as cleft palates or cleft lips; developmental abnormalities; infection and
disease; and cancer or tumors. Reconstructive plastic surgery is usually
performed to improve function, but it may be done to approximate a normal
appearance.
The most common reconstructive
procedures are tumor removal, laceration repair, scar repair, hand surgery, and
breast reduction plasty. According to the American Society of Plastic Surgeons,
the number of reconstructive breast reductions for women increased in 2007 by 2
percent from the year before. Breast reduction in men also increased in 2007 by
7 percent. In 2012, there were 68,416 performed.
Some other common reconstructive
surgical procedures include breast reconstruction after a mastectomy for the treatment
of cancer, cleft lip and palate surgery, contracture surgery for burn
survivors, and creating a new outer ear when one is congenitally absent.
Plastic surgeons use microsurgery to
transfer tissue for coverage of a defect when no local tissue is available.
Free flaps of skin, muscle, bone, fat, or a combination may be removed from the
body, moved to another site on the body, and reconnected to a blood supply by
suturing arteries and veins as small as 1 to 2 millimeters in diameter. (Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc )
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