The Forgotten Healer: The Role of Adipose Tissue in Spontaneous Healing After Free Flap Finger Reconstruction
Macarena Vizcay, Giorgio E. Pajardi, Alessandro Mastroiacovo, Luigi Troisi

TL;DR
This study shows that preserving adipose tissue during finger reconstruction improves healing and outcomes without needing skin grafts.
Contribution
The study introduces the novel concept of intentionally preserving subcutaneous fat to enhance spontaneous healing and contour in fingertip reconstruction.
Findings
Preserved fat promoted healthy granulation and spontaneous epithelialization without skin grafts.
All patients achieved good to excellent functional and aesthetic outcomes with minimal donor-site morbidity.
Fat preservation helped shape the final contour as the nail advanced.
Abstract
Background: Digital pulp reconstruction with toe-based flaps reliably restores sensibility and contour, yet the healing behavior of viable subcutaneous fat remains underexplored. Because adipose tissue exhibits patient-specific regenerative and volumetric responses, its preservation represents a key element of personalized fingertip reconstruction. This study evaluates the outcomes of toe pulp flaps with targeted fat preservation to assess how individual tissue biology influences contour and functional recovery. Methods: We retrospectively reviewed consecutive digital reconstructions performed with free toe flaps and several variations (pulp toe flap, chimeric pulp toe flap, trimmed great toe flap and chimeric pulp+ trimmed great toe). Particular attention was given to healthy subcutaneous fat that was deliberately maintained or exposed to help shape the final contour. All patients were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsReconstructive Surgery and Microvascular Techniques · Wound Healing and Treatments · Mesenchymal stem cell research
