In an effort to minimize the amount of autogenous tissue that is sacrificed in using a random skin flap, the authors, in a porcine model, implanted 3.0 x 7.0-cm (median thickness, 1 mm) sheets of commercially available nonmeshed acellular dermal matrix (AlloDerm) subcutaneously. After a vascularization period of 2 weeks, the implants were elevated and used as turnover dermal flaps to cover adjacent 3.0 x 3.0-cm full-thickness skin defects. Sheets of autogenous cultured keratinocytes were used for epithelium. The AlloDerm-cultured keratinocyte complex flaps healed without any complications. Measurements for percent contraction of the wound to determine the suitability of AlloDerm as a dermal flap showed that the wounds had contracted an average of 18 +/- 3.6% at 24 weeks. Histological evaluation revealed multilayered keratinocytes and indurations between the cultured keratinocytes and AlloDerm. Fibroblast infiltration and the presence of luminal spaces surrounded by capillary endothelium characteristic of neovascularization of the matrix were also noted. This preliminary study may form the basis for developing other types of prefabricated flaps using AlloDerm and cultured keratinocytes