We studied the value of bone scintigraphy in the assessment of
anastomotic patency and bone-cell viability in free bone grafts
revascularized by microvascular anastomoses in twenty-seven dogs. The dogs
were divided into three different groups, and scintigraphy was carried out
using technetium-labeled methylene diphosphonate in composite bone grafts
revascularized by microvascular anastomoses, conventional autogenous bone
grafts, and periosteal grafts placed in different recipient beds. The
viability of the grafts was evaluated by histological examination and
fluorescence microscopy after triple labeling with oxytetracycline on the
first postoperative day, alizarin complexone on the fourth postoperative
day, and DCAF on the eleventh postoperative day. A positive scintiscan
within the first week following surgery indicated patent microvascular
anastomoses, and histological study and fluorescence microscopy confirmed
that bone throughout the graft was viable. A positive scintiscan one week
after surgery or later does not necessarily indicate microvascular patency
or bone-cell survival, because new bone formed by creeping substitution on
the surface of a dead bone graft can result in this finding.