@article{oai:tsukuba.repo.nii.ac.jp:00039989, author = {後藤, 行延 and 佐藤, 幸夫 and Sakai, Mitsuaki and Yamaoka, Masatoshi and Goto, Yukinobu and Sato, Yukio}, journal = {International journal of surgery case reports}, month = {Mar}, note = {Introduction Chest wall skeletal defects are usually closed using muscle flaps or prosthetic materials. Postoperative prosthetic infections are critical complications and often require plastic surgery support. We report a new surgical technique, involving a subscapular muscle flap, for covering posterior chest wall defect., Presentation of case A 75-year-old man was admitted to our hospital. We performed a right upper lobectomy with posterior chest wall resection between the third and sixth ribs. The resulting chest wall defect was covered with a polytetrafluoroethylene mesh that became infected postoperatively. We removed the infected mesh and used the subscapularis muscle, the nearest muscle to the defect, to cover the chest wall defect. The scapular tip was lifted and the lower half of the muscle was dissected. The free end of the flap was sutured to the stumps of the anterior serratus and rhomboid major muscles. Computed tomography, 1 month later, revealed that the flap was engrafted to the chest wall., Discussion No previous study has reported the use of a subscapularis muscle flap for chest wall reconstruction. The lower third of the scapula was excised since blood supply to the scapula tip may be reduced after dissection of the subscapularis muscle, and to prevent the scapula tip from falling into the thoracic cavity., Conclusion The use of a subscapularis muscle flap to repair chest wall defect is a simple and safe technique that can be conducted in the same surgical field as the initial reconstruction surgery and does not require plastic surgery support.}, pages = {198--200}, title = {Subscapularis muscle flap for reconstruction of posterior chest wall skeletal defect}, volume = {10}, year = {2015} }