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What is the camper fascia?

What is the camper fascia?

Camper’s fascia is the superficial fatty layer of the anterior abdominal wall. This fascia is composed of loose areolar tissue and is found deep in the skin and superficial to Scarpa’s fascia.

What becomes Scarpa fascia?

Scarpa’s fascia is a membranous layer of the anterior abdominal wall. Scarpa’s fascia lies below the Camper’s fascia and above the external oblique muscle. It is connected laterally to the aponeurosis of the external oblique muscle. Medially it fades into the linea alba and pubic symphysis.

What is Camper’s fascia continuous with?

superficial fascia
Below, it passes over the inguinal ligament, and is continuous with the superficial fascia of the thigh. In the male, Camper’s fascia is continued over the penis and outer surface of the spermatic cord to the scrotum, where it helps to form the dartos.

What is the fascia Transversalis?

The transversalis fascia is a thin layer of connective tissue lining most of the abdominal cavity between the posterior surface of the transversus abdominis and superficial to the extraperitoneal fat and peritoneum.

Where is the fascia of the camper located?

The fascia of Camper is a thick superficial layer of the anterior abdominal wall. [1] [2] It is areolar in texture, and contains in its meshes a varying quantity of adipose tissue. It is found superficial to the fascia of Scarpa.

What kind of tissue is the dartos fascia?

The dartos fascia or simply dartos is a layer of connective tissue found in the penile shaft, foreskin, and scrotum. The penile portion is referred to as the superficial fascia of penis or the subcutaneous tissue of penis, while the scrotal part is the dartos proper. In addition to being continuous with itself between…

How is skin flap used for Buck’s fascia?

A dermal graft harvested from the lower abdomen may be used to reconstruct the fascial defect and a skin flap (mobilized from the area along the groin crease, as an island skin pedicle flap) used to cover the skin defect. A complete loss of the penis, although devastating, is extremely rare ( Figure 58.6 ).

Can a fascial flap be used as a pedicled flap?

In this anatomic and clinical study we present a new fascial flap that results in a minimal donor-site defect and a short and easy operative procedure. Scarpa’s fascia, which can be used as both a free and a pedicled flap, is a well-defined single membranous sheet within the subcutaneous tissue layer at the lower abdominal wall.