Metopic synostosis is characterized by keel-shaped forehead (trigonocephaly), prominent midline ridge of the forehead, bitemporal narrowing, bilateral retrusion of supraorbits, egg-shaped orbits, low nasal dorsum, and reduced volume of the anterior cranial fossa. The mainstay treatment is early surgical intervention before the age of 12 months, which usually consists of bifrontal craniotomy with bilateral recontouring, lateral advancement, and lateral displacement of the superior orbital rims. Here, we have developed a new simplified technique for surgical treatment of trigonocephaly. A total of 60 cases of trigonocephaly were operated on between January 1995 and January 2010 by the first author. Surgical outcomes were evaluated 6 months after surgery using postoperative photographs and clinical examination notes, and scaling was made using the Whitaker classification. The evaluation showed that 85% of them were in class I, 11.6% were in class II, and 3.3% were in class III. No case was in class IV. Only the last 10 cases received the new surgical technique, and all were in class I. Complication rate was 38.3% for all cases and was only 20% for the last 10 cases, that is, the new technique group. Revision rate for trigonocephaly surgery was 13.3%, and the most common reason was hardware removal. None of the patients from the new technique group underwent revision surgery. We believe that our new technique is fast and easy, can provide sufficient bone graft, and is more useful for older patients (>1 y). Early postoperative results have been promising.
Wound healing is a multipart process involving different cell types and growth factors. Third-degree burns are usually treated by early excision and skin grafting. Tissue engineering has been developed in this field in response to limitations associated with autografts. Allogeneic fibroblasts on meshed split thickness skin grafts (STSGs) are known to have useful properties in wound healing and can be used to construct a new model of living skin substitute. Fourteen patients were chosen from June 2009 until December 2010 as the sample for this study. After debridement and wound excision, meshed STSG was used to cover the entire wound. Alloskin (allofibroblasts cultured on a combination of silicone and glycosaminoglycan) was applied on one side and petroleum jelly-impregnated gauze (Iran Polymer and Petrochemical Institute) was applied on the other. The healing time, scar formation, and pigmentation score were assessed for the patients. All analyses were undertaken with SPSS 17 software. Alloskin demonstrated good properties compared to petroleum jelly-impregnated gauze. The average healing time and hypertrophic scar formation were significantly different between the two groups. In addition, the skin pigmentation score in the alloskin group was closer to normal. Alloskin grafting, including fibroblasts on meshed STSG, may be a useful method to reduce healing time and scar size and may require less autologous STSG in extensive burns where a high percentage of skin is burned and there is a lack of available donor sites.
The peripheral primitive neuroectodermal tumor (pPNET) is a rare and highly malignant soft tissue neoplasm in children and young adults. Fewer than 10 reported cases of pPNET of maxilla are available in the English literature. A 28-year-old woman was presented with the pPNET of the maxilla and metastasis. Two years after diagnosis, she experienced diplopia, and then magnetic resonance imaging was done, which showed a mass in the optic chiasma and parasellar region. The typical appearance resembled large noncalcified soft tissue masses in the magnetic resonance image and computed tomographic scan of the maxilla. Diagnosis was established by immunohistochemical features. She was treated with surgery, chemotherapy, radiation therapy, and gamma knife. She was under close observation since then (approximately 8 mo), and there has been no recurrence of tumor up to now.
Rhinometry can change the ideas of plastic surgeons about the changes their operative approaches accomplish and can be a very useful guide for patients. It is recommended as a part of the pre- and postoperative physical examination of patients undergoing rhinoplasty.
Trigonocephaly is one of the most common types of craniosynostosis leading to triangular-shaped head and neurodevelopmental complications. Several surgical techniques have been suggested for its correction, but the newly suggested technique seems to have optimal outcomes compared with the traditional methods. Thus, the authors retrospectively evaluated the outcomes of the simplified horse-shoe technique with previous procedures performed on 169 children severe trigonocephaly during 1996 to 2015 at Mofid Hospital, Tehran, Iran. Demographic data of the patients and the surgical outcomes and complications and the need for reoperation were recorded and scored using the Whitaker system. The male-to-female ratio was 2.75:1. The mean ± standard deviation age of all the patients at the time of surgery was 7.09 ± 7.5, 9.95 ± 7.71, 10.53 ± 6.57, and 10.59 ± 7.96 months for the traditional, horse-shoe, and simplified horse-shoe techniques, respectively. The total reoperation rate was 6.5% (4.7% in the traditional technique, 1.2% in the horse-shoe, and 0.6% in the simplified horse-shoe technique) (P < 0.001). The main reason for reoperation was hardware removal (in the traditional technique). Whitaker scoring showed no patients of class IV in any of the groups and no patients of class III and IV in simplified horse-shoe technique, but the difference in the Whitaker scores among the 3 groups was not statistically significant (P = 1.176). The new surgical technique is easier and simpler with fewer complications than the traditional technique and is suggested to be recommended for surgical treatment in children with trigonocephaly, especially in younger children.
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