Surgical Correction of Unilateral Nasal Bony Deformity Using Nasal Septum Cartilage Following Treatment for Naso-orbitalethmoid Fractures: A Case Report

Shimane Journal of Medical Science Volume 34 Issue 2 Page 61-66 published_at 2017-12-31
アクセス数 : 1752
ダウンロード数 : 152

今月のアクセス数 : 68
今月のダウンロード数 : 4
File
Title
Surgical Correction of Unilateral Nasal Bony Deformity Using Nasal Septum Cartilage Following Treatment for Naso-orbitalethmoid Fractures: A Case Report
Creator
Kanno Takahiro
Source Title
Shimane Journal of Medical Science
Volume 34
Issue 2
Start Page 61
End Page 66
Journal Identifire
ISSN 03865959
EISSN 24332410
Descriptions
Naso-orbital-ethmoid (NOE) fracture is relatively
common in midfacial regions, but management remains
challenging. Here we report a novel technique
using nasal septal cartilage to correct para-nasal soft
tissue asymmetry in a 17-year-old Japanese male 6
months after surgical treatment of fractures in the
NOE complex. An otorhinolaryngologist harvested
the septal cartilage during nasal septoplasty to correct
a deviated septum that was planned to coincide
with removal of the plates 6 months after the
primary surgery. The maxillofacial surgeons then
grafted the septal cartilage into the concave area in
the right para-nasal region and fixed it with a bioresorbable
screw after removal of the right plate via a
transconjunctival approach. The postoperative course
was uneventful and the patient was satisfied with
the cosmetic outcome after 9 months postoperatively.
Septal cartilage could be an effective grafting material
for correction of postoperative midfacial concave
deformity following repair of an NOE fracture.
Subjects
naso-orbital-ethmoid fracture ( Other)
midface fracture ( Other)
open reduction and internal fixation ( Other)
nasal septal cartilage ( Other)
septoplasty ( Other)
Language
eng
Resource Type departmental bulletin paper
Publisher
Faculty of Medicine, Shimane University
島根大学医学部
Date of Issued 2017-12-31
Rights
Faculty of Medicine, Shimane University
Publish Type Version of Record
Access Rights open access
Relation
[NCID] AA00841586