Sphenoid sinus accessory septations involve serious complications during their removal for the injury of the internal carotid artery (ICA) and the optic nerve (ON). The relationships of this anatomical variant with sphenoid size still remain unclear. In the present study, 260 patients (equally divided among sexes, aged between 18 and 92 years) were retrospectively assessed. Number of accessory septations and their relationship with ICA and ON were recorded. The 3D model of sphenoid sinuses was extracted. Pearson's coefficient was calculated to assess correlations between the volume of sphenoid sinuses and the number of septations (P < 0.05). Sexrelated differences in prevalence of septations inserted onto ICA or ON were assessed through chi-square test (P < 0.05). Differences in volume between patients with and without ICA or ON septal insertions were assessed through Mann-Whitney test (P < 0.05). In most of the cases, two septations were found (24.6%), whereas only 21.9% of patients did not show any septum. ICA and ON septal insertions were found in 20.8% and 7.7% of cases, respectively. Number of septations significantly increased with sinus volume, independently from sex (P < 0.001). Moreover, volume was significantly higher in patients with ICA septal insertion (P < 0.001), whereas no difference was found between subjects with and without ON septal insertion (P > 0.05). The present study first proved that septations and probability of ICA insertion are related with sphenoid volume. On the other side, ON insertion does not depend upon sphenoid sinuses size. Anat Rec, 303:1300-1304, 2020.
Sphenoid bone may be affected by different variants of pneumatisation, which have a relevant importance from a clinical and surgical point of view. The description of such variants in different populations may give useful information. However, few articles describe the variability of sphenoid pneumatised structures and none of them focuses on Northern Italian population. Variants of pneumatisation of sphenoid bone were described in a sample of 300 Northern Italian patients who underwent a CT scan. More than fifty-seven percent of patients showed a form of anatomical variant: the most common form was the pneumatised pterygoid processes (39.6%), followed by dorsum sellae (32.9%) and clinoid processes (20.3%), without statistically significant differences between males and females (p > 0.01). In 26.3% of patients, a combined pneumatisation of these three structures was observed, being the combination pterygoid processes-dorsum sellae the most frequent (11.3%). In 9.3%, all the three sphenoid structures were affected. This article is the first description of the prevalence of different variants of pneumatisation in a Northern Italian population: the occurrence of such forms has to be acknowledged for their possible clinical and surgical consequences.
Anatomical uniqueness plays a significant role in the personal identification process of unknown deceased. Frontal sinuses have been widely used in the past decades for this purpose, mostly using 2D X-ray techniques. However, the modern 3D CT-based segmentation methods may help in developing novel and more reliable methods of identification. This study aims at assessing the anatomical uniqueness of frontal sinuses through the 3D model registration. Thirty subjects who underwent two maxillofacial CT scans (interval: 1 month to 5 years) were selected from a hospital database. Frontal sinuses were automatically segmented through ITK-SNAP open source software and the 3D models belonging to the same patient were automatically superimposed according to the least point-to-point difference between the two surfaces. Two hundred patients were randomly selected from the same database and undergo the same procedure to perform 200 superimpositions of frontal sinuses belonging to different individuals, equally divided between males and females (mismatches). Statistically significant differences of average root mean square (RMS) point-to-point distance between the group of matches and mismatches, as well as possible differences according to sex, were assessed through Mann-Whitney U test (p < 0.05). In the group of matches, RMS ranged between 0.07 and 0.96 mm (mean RMS 0.35 ± 0.23 mm), while in the group of mismatches, it ranged between 0.96 and 10.29 mm (mean RMS 2.59 ± 1.79 mm), with a statistically significant difference (p < 0.0001). Neither the matches nor the mismatches group showed statistically significant differences according to sex. This study proposes a novel 3D approach for the assessment of anatomical uniqueness of frontal sinuses, providing both morphological and quantitative analysis, and a new method of identification based on 3D assessment of frontal sinuses, applicable when ante-mortem CT scans are available.
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