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Publication
Featured researches published by Kok-Chai Tan.
Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 1989
John J. Coleman; Kok-Chai Tan; John M. Searles; Roderick T. Hester; Foad Nahai
Review of 101 patients who underwent 111 free jejunal autografts has demonstrated an absolute procedural failure rate of 13.5 percent. Salvage reconstruction with a second jejunum was successful in six of nine patients and one third-time jejunum was successful, giving an overall salvage rate of 70 percent. There were 33 patients experiencing pharyngocutaneous fistulas, 20 of whom had been previously irradiated. Of these patients, 15 experienced spontaneous closure and 9 others had successful surgical correction. The mortality rate was 5 percent. Eighty-three percent of patients were restored to adequate per oral alimentation. The jejunum, despite its relatively high complication rate, is an excellent method for pharyngoesophageal reconstruction, expeditiously providing return to function for patients with late-stage disease.
Annals of Plastic Surgery | 2004
Poh-Koon Koh; Bien-Keem Tan; Soo-Wan Hong; Mann-Hong Tan; Andrew Tay; Colin Song; Kok-Chai Tan
Four patients diagnosed with sacral chordoma underwent reconstruction with the gluteus maximus flap using an approach based on available muscle remnants and their residual blood supply. The entire unilateral gluteus maximus muscle was turned over to fill the defect in 2 patients. The flap was based on 1 or 2 gluteal vessels, depending on vessel availability following tumor resection. When all 4 major pedicles had been ligated, bilateral advancement gluteal muscle flaps based on their distal blood supply were used (patient 3). A longitudinally split flap was used for secondary reconstruction of a partially obliterated defect (patient 4). Over a mean follow-up period of 8 months, there was no wound breakdown and all patients were ambulant.
Journal of Reconstructive Microsurgery | 2011
Hui-Ling Chia; Chin-Ho Wong; Bien-Keem Tan; Kok-Chai Tan; Yee-Siang Ong
This article details an algorithm we used for selection of recipient vessels in free tissue transfer to the head and neck. Eighty-eight consecutive free flaps to the head and neck were performed in 85 patients. The superior thyroid was the commonest recipient artery used (61%). The facial artery, used in 14% of our cases, is the choice vessel in instances where neck dissection is not performed. In these cases, we have to access the neck separately for recipient vessels and it can be exposed easily via a short (3-cm) incision. The superficial temporal artery (11%) is our choice vessel for patients with previous neck dissection or radiotherapy as it is well outside the previous operative or irradiated field. Other vessels such as the transverse cervical and end-to-side anastomosis to the carotid artery were also used when appropriate. Recipient vein selection depends primarily on the selected artery. Corresponding veins and large branches of the internal jugular vein (IJV) in the vicinity of the selected artery are preferred. When these are exhausted, the external jugular vein and end-to-side anastomosis to the IJV are considered. We found this algorithm to be reliable in identifying the appropriate vessels in all cases.
Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 2006
Chin-Ho Wong; Colin Song; Yee-Siang Ong; Bien-Keem Tan; Kok-Chai Tan; Chee-Liam Foo
Necrotizing fasciitis is perhaps the deadliest form of soft-tissue infection, characterized by a fulminant course and a high mortality rate.1 Meleney in 1924 gave the first modern description of this clinical entity when he introduced the term “acute hemolytic streptococcal gangrene.”2 The term necrotizing fasciitis, coined by Wilson in 1952, is perhaps the most accurate term describing the key features of this infectious process.3 Although our understanding of the pathophysiology of necrotizing fasciitis continues to improve, physicians confronted with this clinical entity continue to thread through “Meleney’s minefield,” fraught with dangers of delayed or even missed diagnosis with catastrophic consequences. In this article, we present a case that we recently managed and highlight the deceptively benign initial presentation of necrotizing fasciitis.
Journal of Reconstructive Microsurgery | 2001
Erik S.W. Ang; Kok-Chai Tan; Leonard H. C. Tan; Robert T.H. Ng; I. C. Song
Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 2006
Chin-Ho Wong; Colin Song; Irene H.-C. Kee; Sim-Leng Tien; Priyanthi Kumarasinghe; Lay-Wai Khin; Kok-Chai Tan
Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 2004
Colin Tham; Bien-Keem Tan; Soo-Wan Hong; Winston Yoon Chong Chew; Chee-Kwang Low; Kok-Chai Tan
Burns | 1997
Erik S.W. Ang; Kok-Chai Tan
Journal of Reconstructive Microsurgery | 2014
Pearlie W.W. Tan; Kok-Chai Tan; Bien-Keem Tan
American Society of Reconstructive Microsurgery. Annual Meeting | 2009
Mohamed Zulfikar Rasheed; Bien-Keem Tan; Kok-Chai Tan