IMPORTANCEThe impact of facial reconstructive surgery on improving affect display for patients with facial lesions is incompletely understood.OBJECTIVES To measure the impact of surgically reconstructing facial lesions on observer graded affect display.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTSThis was a prospective randomized controlled experiment at an academic tertiary referral center; 120 naïve observers completed one of 4 surveys of 20 images of faces.
MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURESA total of 80 different images of faces were used: 32 faces with lesions preoperatively and postoperatively, and 16 normal faces. The 32 lesion faces were categorized into 4 categories of lesion with 8 faces in each category: small peripheral, small central, large peripheral, and large central. Participants viewed 20 images of faces: 8 preoperative, 8 postoperative, and 4 normal. Observers rated faces by selecting all terms that applied from 8 affects of the Derogatis Affects Balance Scale (DABS), the Ekman scale's 6 basic emotions, and a neutral term. Latent class analysis and regression were used to determine number and characteristics of affect classes and significance of covariates: operation status, size, and location. Postoperative faces were compared with normal faces via bootstrap analysis to determine statistically significant differences in affect display. Analysis took place in August 2014 and was verified in December 2015.RESULTS A total of 120 observers rated 80 facial images via 4 surveys. The mean (SD) age of the observers was 32.2 (13.5) years (range, 18-72 years). Both scales collapsed into 3 latent classes: positive, neutral, and negative for normal faces and faces with lesions. Using the DABS, faces with lesions preoperatively were more likely to be in the negative affect class (small peripheral [SP]:
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