Plastic Surgery (6 Parts)

Synopsis
Series on plastic surgery.
1: Illustrates the Randall and Tennison technique. The careful dissection of the lip muscles and positioning of the alar cartilage is shown and the restoration of the normal anatomical position of the muscles is illustrated. This procedure is normally difficult to observe but is made much simpler by the fact that the patient is considerably older than the normal three months at which repair is undertaken. The surgeon throughout is Mr T L Barclay.
2: Shows the classical Skoog method of fasciectomy and illustrates the modifications by Mr Barclay.
3: Shows a successor to the Strenstrom method of elevating the slumped alar cartilage.
4: Shows a technique for the treatment of minor skin trauma. The method is particularly suitable for elderly patients in whom damage to the skin of the lower limb is fairly common and for whom lengthy hospitilisation following standard skin grafting is impractical. The procedure is performed under local anaesthesia, and the meshed graft is applied to the leg with glue, which speeds up both the surgery and the healing process. Patients are ambulant immediately after the operation and can be discharged within 24 hours.
5: Recent advances in plastic surgery techniques have resulted in the evolution of a flap which includes not only skin and fat but fascia. This has resulted in a much improved blood supply to the flap which enables a greater length to breadth ratio to be used. As a consequence flaps which previously had fallen into disrepute for repair of lower limb defects can now be used with minimal risk. Shows the raising of a fascio-cutaneous flap for repair to a defect on the lower limb. It stresses the care required in the separation of the flap below the fascial plane and illustrates the method of setting into the defect.
6: Shows a techique for estimating the viability of a cross-leg flap prior to its division. This has proved invaluable in ensuring that the earliest possible division and consequent mobilisation of the patient can be achieved.
Language
English
Country
Great Britain
Medium
Video; Videocassette. Standard formats. col. 46, 42, 27, 7, 28, 9 min.
Year of production
1982
Availability
OUT OF DISTRIBUTION
Uses
Plastic surgeons.
Subjects
Medical sciences
Keywords
cleft lip and cleft palate; plastic surgery; surgery

Credits

Producer
Fiona W Jackson
Contributor
T L Barclay

Sections

Title
Repair of cleft lip by the triangular flap method
Synopsis
1: Illustrates the Randall and Tennison technique. The careful dissection of the lip muscles and positioning of the alar cartilage is shown and the restoration of the normal anatomical position of the muscles is illustrated. This procedure is normally dif

Title
Excision of Depuytren’s contracture by Skoog’s selective aponeurosectomy
Synopsis
2: Shows the classical Skoog method of fasciectomy and illustrates the modifications by Mr Barclay.

Title
Correction of secondary deformity of the nose in unilateral cleft lip by Kernahan’s method
Synopsis
3: Shows a successor to the Strenstrom method of elevating the slumped alar cartilage.

Title
Mesh skin grafting of lower leg defects
Synopsis
4: Shows a technique for the treatment of minor skin trauma. The method is particularly suitable for elderly patients in whom damage to the skin of the lower limb is fairly common and for whom lengthy hospitilisation following standard skin grafting is im

Title
Cross-leg superflap, The
Synopsis
5: Recent advances in plastic surgery techniques have resulted in the evolution of a flap which includes not only skin and fat but fascia. This has resulted in a much improved blood supply to the flap which enables a greater length to breadth ratio to be

Title
Flourescine in separation of cross-leg flaps
Synopsis
6: Shows a techique for estimating the viability of a cross-leg flap prior to its division. This has proved invaluable in ensuring that the earliest possible division and consequent mobilisation of the patient can be achieved.

Production Company

Name

University of Leeds Media Services

Notes
see Leeds University Television

Distributor

Name

Leeds University Television

Contact
Sally Popplewell (Sales supervisor)
Email
mediaservices@leeds.ac.uk
Web
http://mediant.leeds.ac.uk/vtcatalogue/ External site opens in new window
Phone
0113 343 2660
Fax
0113 343 2669
Address
Media Services
University of Leeds
Leeds
LS2 9JT

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