Other Reconstructive Surgery Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effect of Pulsed Electromagnetic Fields on Postoperative Recovery After TRAM Flap Breast Reconstruction
Pedicled transverse rectus abdominus myocutaneous (TRAM) flaps are the most common
post-mastectomy breast reconstructive surgeries that utilize the patient's tissue. The
pedicled TRAM flap involves harvesting skin, fat, and muscle from the abdomen to create a new
breast. TRAM flap complications include fat necrosis of the reconstructed breast, delayed
wound healing, and abdominal bulge or hernia. Pain at the abdominal donor site is a major
contributor to the need for four to five days of post-operative hospital stay. Pulsed
electromagnetic field (PEMF) technologies have been useful as adjunctive therapy for the
treatment of delayed union fractures, chronic wounds and post-operative pain. PEMF devices
are economical and disposable, and can be incorporated unobtrusively in standard
post-operative dressings. The investigators have recently reported, in a double-blind,
placebo-controlled study on breast reduction, that post-op PEMF therapy produced a
significant decrease in pain and pain medication use, along with a concomitant decrease in
IL1-beta in the wound bed.
The proposed study seeks to determine whether similar results will be obtained after a
significantly more extensive surgical procedure, like the TRAM flap. Patients scheduled for
pedicled TRAM flap breast reconstruction of a single breast immediately following mastectomy
will be enrolled in this double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized study. Subjects will be
assigned to one of two groups: a treatment group with active PEMF devices and a placebo group
with sham devices that deliver no PEMF. PEMF and sham devices will be taped over both the
breast reconstruction and abdominal donor sites. Patients will keep the devices in place for
their hospital stay and for a total of two weeks. The investigators hypothesize that subjects
in the PEMF treatment group compared to placebo will have a faster reduction in pain, take
less pain and nausea medications, have lower levels of IL1-beta in wound exudate, have a
shorter hospital stay, and have less wound-healing complications.
Operations will be performed by one of two plastic surgeons who perform this surgery in a similar manner. The entire unilateral rectus abdominis muscle will be harvested with fascial-sparing as part of the pedicled TRAM flap. The flap will be shaped and sutured to the chest site, and the abdominal fascial defect will be closed primarily, followed by a polypropylene mesh overlay. Two 10 mm Jackson-Pratt (JP) drains will be placed in the flap wound, and two JPs will be placed in the abdominal wound. Immediately after transfer of the extubated patient to the recovery room bed, study devices will be placed on the reconstructed breast and abdominal donor sites, and activated. In the treatment arm, the PEMF signal is automatically delivered every two hours for fifteen minutes while the patient is in the hospital. ;
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