A longitudinally split rabbit segmental gracilis to simulate penile erectile function: anatomic basis and animal models
J. Yi, D.-Z. Yu, H. Wang, A. Liu, F. Fang, Q. Hou, T. Han, X.-h. Zhu, H. Jiang Department of Plastic Surgery, Chang Zheng Hospital, Second Military Medical University, Shanghai, People’s Republic of China. dosjh@126.com
OBJECTIVE: The gracilis was once applied in reconstructing erectile function but its appearance was bulky. We aimed to design a model meeting the requirements of both reducing volume and retaining function.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: The gracilis muscles of 6 rabbits were harvested, applied colorful vascular perfusion and modified Sihler’s intramuscular nerve staining. According to their intramuscular nerves and blood vessels, 9 rabbit right gracilis muscles were then longitudinally split into two halves. The anterior muscle bundle was selected as the functional unit and blood supply.
RESULTS: The intramuscular nerves and vessels were simultaneously presented on a same specimen. Their relationship suggested gracilis muscle to be composed of two relatively independent subunits. The reconstructed penis survived well, simulating erectile action satisfactorily.
DISCUSSION: The penis model reconstructed with longitudinally split rabbit segmental gracilis myocutaneous flap had met the requirements of both restoring erectile function and improving the appearance.
Free PDF DownloadThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License
To cite this article
J. Yi, D.-Z. Yu, H. Wang, A. Liu, F. Fang, Q. Hou, T. Han, X.-h. Zhu, H. Jiang
A longitudinally split rabbit segmental gracilis to simulate penile erectile function: anatomic basis and animal models
Eur Rev Med Pharmacol Sci
Year: 2016
Vol. 20 - N. 1
Pages: 12-19