Facial Trauma Surgery

Secondary Midfacial Reconstruction

Background Secondary deformities resulting from complications in treating craniofacial injuries, specifically the midface, occur even when treated by experienced surgeons. Following proper surgical principles and recognizing the potential functional and aesthetic sequelae limits many complications. Ideal primary reconstruction is not…

Secondary Orbital Reconstruction

Background Persistent enophthalmos and diplopia following primary orbital reconstruction lead to unsatisfactory aesthetic and functional outcomes, respectively. Diplopia after surgical repair of orbital fractures has been reported in 8%–52% of patients, while clinically significant enophthalmos has been reported in 27%.…

Posttraumatic Nasal Deformities

Background Nasal bone fractures are the most common type of facial fracture, and the third most common fracture of the human skeleton. Nasal trauma is often the result of motor vehicle collisions, sports-related injuries, altercations, and falls. The annual incidence…

Secondary Nasoethmoid Fracture Repair

Background High-energy midfacial trauma commonly results in naso-orbito-ethmoid (NOE) fractures, which present some of the greatest diagnostic and therapeutic challenges in facial trauma reconstruction. Fractures of the nasoethmoid region are defined as a midface fracture resulting in lateral displacement of…

Pediatric Cranial Reconstruction

Background Pediatric head trauma is a major source of morbidity, resulting in 600,000 emergency room visits annually within the United States. Between 10% and 30% of head traumas are associated with calvarial fractures, and of those greater than 50% have…

Reconstruction of Full-Thickness Frontocranial Defects

Background Paul Manson, Bill Crawley, and Jack Hoopes in 1986 published a paper entitled “Frontal cranioplasty: risk factors and choice of cranial vault reconstructive material.” In that paper they examined their series of 42 cranioplasties, 25 of which were treated…

Pediatric Mandible Fractures

Background The topic of pediatric mandible fractures covers a wide range of patients with multiple clinical variables. Patients can range from a neonate with a mandible fracture stemming from birth trauma to an 18-year-old with full permanent dentition and multiple…

Pediatric Midface Fractures

Background The management of pediatric facial fractures presents some unique and specific opportunities that differ from those in the adult world. It is important to recognize that children are not small adults, and when possible, treatment should be conservative. There…