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| <center><WikiQuiz | | <center><WikiQuiz |
| questionnumber="9" | | questionnumber="9" |
− | question="" | + | question="Unfortunately radiation therapy is not available, and the clients refuse amputation. The specialist oncology surgeon plans the surgery to achieve the widest margins possible (deep and lateral), and then reconstructs the deficit with an axial pattern flap (see photos of resected tumour. Note that the underlying deep fascia has been resected en bloc with the tumour). What is an axial-pattern flap?" |
− | choice1="" | + | choice1="A skin flap rotated around an axis in a specified pattern" |
− | choice2="" | + | choice2="A skin flap containing a direct cutaneous artery and vein " |
− | choice3="" | + | choice3="A skin flap, which is detached from the donor site and placed on the recipient site in an axial pattern " |
− | choice4="" | + | choice4="A skin flap, which is tubed and after 2 weeks is then ‘caterpillared’ to cover the skin deficit " |
| choice5="" | | choice5="" |
− | correctchoice="4" | + | correctchoice="2" |
− | feedback1="" | + | feedback1="'''Incorrect'''. You need a better understanding of possible surgical options. Review a general animal surgery text and choose again." |
− | feedback2="" | + | feedback2="Correct. This means the skin flap has a 50% greater chance of survival than a skin flap, which does not contain a direct cutaneous artery and vein." |
− | feedback3="" | + | feedback3="'''Incorrect'''. You need a better understanding of possible surgical options. Review a general animal surgery text and choose again." |
− | feedback4="" | + | feedback4="'''Incorrect'''. You need a better understanding of possible surgical options. Review a general animal surgery text and choose again." |
| feedback5="" | | feedback5="" |
| image= ""> | | image= ""> |