This study evaluates the usefulness of endoscopic repair in certain types of facial fractures (orbital floor, isolated zygomatic arch and isolated anterior table frontal sinus fractures).Endoscopic application in otorhinolaryngology has expanded into many areas including facial plastic surgery and facial trauma (orbital blow-out, frontal sinus, zygomatic arch, and subcondylar fractures), therefore limiting the use of incisions for exposure. Endoscopically assisted facial bone surgery can be performed with many advantages, including: magnified direct visualization, decreased scarring, avoidance of numbness beyond the incision line, greater acceptability to the patient, decreased complication rate and short hospitalization. For assessment of the value of endoscopy in repair of certain facial fractures, we selected 12 consented patients with either orbital floor fracture, isolated zygomatic arch fracture or isolated anterior table frontal sinus fracture to be involved in our study after stabilizing the general condition. The patients were evaluated preoperatively by an ophthalmologist and all had complete CT study including coronal, axial (both bony and soft-tissue windows), sagital and 3D images. The patients were analyzed for sex, age, time of surgery, pre/postoperative symptoms; including ophthalmic symptoms, facial paraesthesia and aesthetic problems. The results of our endoscopic approach were evaluated esthetically and functionally to be classified into good, fair and poor results. We also classified the level of the surgery according to its difficulty into difficult, average and easy surgical performance.Good results were achieved in 8fractures (42%); fair in 8fractures (42%) and finally 3fractures (16%) with poor endoscopic result. The performed surgery considered easy in 9 (41%) patients, average in 6 (31%) patients and difficult in 4 (21%) patients. All patients had no significant complications. Conclusion: Endoscopic repair appears to be a safe and effective technique for repairing certain types of facial fracture.
Published in | American Journal of Health Research (Volume 2, Issue 6) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.ajhr.20140206.22 |
Page(s) | 392-396 |
Creative Commons |
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
Copyright |
Copyright © The Author(s), 2014. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Endoscopic Repair, Orbital Floor Fracture, Zygomatic Arch Fracture, Frontal Sinus Fracture
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APA Style
Mohammad Noaman Mohammad Ali, Abdel-Hay Rashad El-Assy MD, El-Hussainy El-Hussainy Shreef MD, Yasser Abd El-wahab Khalil MD, Yasser Mohmmed Al-Sheikh MD. (2014). Assessment of Endoscopic Role in Management of Facial Fractures. American Journal of Health Research, 2(6), 392-396. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajhr.20140206.22
ACS Style
Mohammad Noaman Mohammad Ali; Abdel-Hay Rashad El-Assy MD; El-Hussainy El-Hussainy Shreef MD; Yasser Abd El-wahab Khalil MD; Yasser Mohmmed Al-Sheikh MD. Assessment of Endoscopic Role in Management of Facial Fractures. Am. J. Health Res. 2014, 2(6), 392-396. doi: 10.11648/j.ajhr.20140206.22
AMA Style
Mohammad Noaman Mohammad Ali, Abdel-Hay Rashad El-Assy MD, El-Hussainy El-Hussainy Shreef MD, Yasser Abd El-wahab Khalil MD, Yasser Mohmmed Al-Sheikh MD. Assessment of Endoscopic Role in Management of Facial Fractures. Am J Health Res. 2014;2(6):392-396. doi: 10.11648/j.ajhr.20140206.22
@article{10.11648/j.ajhr.20140206.22, author = {Mohammad Noaman Mohammad Ali and Abdel-Hay Rashad El-Assy MD and El-Hussainy El-Hussainy Shreef MD and Yasser Abd El-wahab Khalil MD and Yasser Mohmmed Al-Sheikh MD}, title = {Assessment of Endoscopic Role in Management of Facial Fractures}, journal = {American Journal of Health Research}, volume = {2}, number = {6}, pages = {392-396}, doi = {10.11648/j.ajhr.20140206.22}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajhr.20140206.22}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.ajhr.20140206.22}, abstract = {This study evaluates the usefulness of endoscopic repair in certain types of facial fractures (orbital floor, isolated zygomatic arch and isolated anterior table frontal sinus fractures).Endoscopic application in otorhinolaryngology has expanded into many areas including facial plastic surgery and facial trauma (orbital blow-out, frontal sinus, zygomatic arch, and subcondylar fractures), therefore limiting the use of incisions for exposure. Endoscopically assisted facial bone surgery can be performed with many advantages, including: magnified direct visualization, decreased scarring, avoidance of numbness beyond the incision line, greater acceptability to the patient, decreased complication rate and short hospitalization. For assessment of the value of endoscopy in repair of certain facial fractures, we selected 12 consented patients with either orbital floor fracture, isolated zygomatic arch fracture or isolated anterior table frontal sinus fracture to be involved in our study after stabilizing the general condition. The patients were evaluated preoperatively by an ophthalmologist and all had complete CT study including coronal, axial (both bony and soft-tissue windows), sagital and 3D images. The patients were analyzed for sex, age, time of surgery, pre/postoperative symptoms; including ophthalmic symptoms, facial paraesthesia and aesthetic problems. The results of our endoscopic approach were evaluated esthetically and functionally to be classified into good, fair and poor results. We also classified the level of the surgery according to its difficulty into difficult, average and easy surgical performance.Good results were achieved in 8fractures (42%); fair in 8fractures (42%) and finally 3fractures (16%) with poor endoscopic result. The performed surgery considered easy in 9 (41%) patients, average in 6 (31%) patients and difficult in 4 (21%) patients. All patients had no significant complications. Conclusion: Endoscopic repair appears to be a safe and effective technique for repairing certain types of facial fracture.}, year = {2014} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Assessment of Endoscopic Role in Management of Facial Fractures AU - Mohammad Noaman Mohammad Ali AU - Abdel-Hay Rashad El-Assy MD AU - El-Hussainy El-Hussainy Shreef MD AU - Yasser Abd El-wahab Khalil MD AU - Yasser Mohmmed Al-Sheikh MD Y1 - 2014/12/17 PY - 2014 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajhr.20140206.22 DO - 10.11648/j.ajhr.20140206.22 T2 - American Journal of Health Research JF - American Journal of Health Research JO - American Journal of Health Research SP - 392 EP - 396 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2330-8796 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajhr.20140206.22 AB - This study evaluates the usefulness of endoscopic repair in certain types of facial fractures (orbital floor, isolated zygomatic arch and isolated anterior table frontal sinus fractures).Endoscopic application in otorhinolaryngology has expanded into many areas including facial plastic surgery and facial trauma (orbital blow-out, frontal sinus, zygomatic arch, and subcondylar fractures), therefore limiting the use of incisions for exposure. Endoscopically assisted facial bone surgery can be performed with many advantages, including: magnified direct visualization, decreased scarring, avoidance of numbness beyond the incision line, greater acceptability to the patient, decreased complication rate and short hospitalization. For assessment of the value of endoscopy in repair of certain facial fractures, we selected 12 consented patients with either orbital floor fracture, isolated zygomatic arch fracture or isolated anterior table frontal sinus fracture to be involved in our study after stabilizing the general condition. The patients were evaluated preoperatively by an ophthalmologist and all had complete CT study including coronal, axial (both bony and soft-tissue windows), sagital and 3D images. The patients were analyzed for sex, age, time of surgery, pre/postoperative symptoms; including ophthalmic symptoms, facial paraesthesia and aesthetic problems. The results of our endoscopic approach were evaluated esthetically and functionally to be classified into good, fair and poor results. We also classified the level of the surgery according to its difficulty into difficult, average and easy surgical performance.Good results were achieved in 8fractures (42%); fair in 8fractures (42%) and finally 3fractures (16%) with poor endoscopic result. The performed surgery considered easy in 9 (41%) patients, average in 6 (31%) patients and difficult in 4 (21%) patients. All patients had no significant complications. Conclusion: Endoscopic repair appears to be a safe and effective technique for repairing certain types of facial fracture. VL - 2 IS - 6 ER -