1981
DOI: 10.3109/02844318109103449
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Fronto-Orbito-Nasal Dislocations: Secondary Treatment of Sequelae

Abstract: Untreated or maltreated fronto-orbito-nasal dislocations can give rise to serious sequelae of a functional or aesthetic nature. Two major problems may be discerned, namely extensive bone loss and malunited fractures. The loss of bone can result in an unfavourable aesthetic appearance and functional disturbances, e.g. loss of eye motility, cerebral herniations and meningitis. The treatment should therefore include protection of the underlying elements, such as eye and meningocerebral tissues with a definite iso… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…It is the preference of the authors to use calvarial bone grafting and/or hydroxyapatite cement in most cases because of reliability and resistance to infection. 6,14,16,17 Osteotomies will often need to be performed through previous fracture lines to mobilize malunited segments. New osteotomies across fracture lines may make the problem worse because the segments can be destabilized or devascularized by poorly united fractures crossing them.…”
Section: Bone Replacement or Repositioningmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is the preference of the authors to use calvarial bone grafting and/or hydroxyapatite cement in most cases because of reliability and resistance to infection. 6,14,16,17 Osteotomies will often need to be performed through previous fracture lines to mobilize malunited segments. New osteotomies across fracture lines may make the problem worse because the segments can be destabilized or devascularized by poorly united fractures crossing them.…”
Section: Bone Replacement or Repositioningmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The fronto-orbital fractures include frontal bone fracture, lateral orbital wall fracture, medial orbital wall fracture, supra-orbital wall fracture, and infra-orbital wall fracture. [53] •…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%