100
A 42-year-old woman with a history of progressive facial atrophy comes to the office because of a moderately sized soft-tissue deficit on the left side of the face. She is scheduled to undergo a single fat transfer procedure for correction. Which of the following is the most likely outcome of this procedure in this patient?
A ) Donor site seroma
B ) Facial nerve injury
C ) Fat embolism
D ) Hypertrophic scarring
E ) Inadequate correction
What is E
Romberg disease, or progressive facial atrophy, is a rare pathologic process characterized by an acquired, idiopathic, self-limited, unilateral atrophy of the face, variably involving skin, subcutaneous tissues, fat, muscle, and less frequently, the underlying bone structures. Methods of restoration of facial contour and volume in these patients include synthetic implants, bone grafts, free tissue transfer, and fat grafting.
Fat injections have been used for over 20 years to correct soft-tissue deformities throughout the body. Fat grafts are often used for ?touch-up? of various reconstructive procedures. This technique has been found to be helpful as an adjunct to free tissue transfer in cases of progressive facial atrophy and congenital hemifacial microsomia.
Although fat embolism has been rarely reported during fat transfer in the face, complication rates of fat grafting are low, especially when compared with complications of free tissue transfer for reconstruction of facial deformities, which may include donor site seroma, facial nerve injury, and hypertrophic scarring. The most common adverse outcome of fat grafting is likely to be inadequate correction with a single-stage procedure. A recent study found that no statistically significant difference was found in satisfaction rates between free flap reconstruction and serial fat grafting of soft-tissue deficits in hemifacial microsomia.