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OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to longitudinally assess the risk of facial nerve injury (FNI) in the surgical repair of mandibular condylar neck and subcondylar fractures (CN/SCFs) and to explore its predictors. MATERIALS AND METHODS: In a retrospective cohort study, the outcome was defined as FNI at 1 week and 1, 3, and 6 months postoperatively. Potential predictors included age, sex, etiology, fracture site and pattern (dislocation/non-dislocation), concomitant facial fractures, interval to surgery, surgeons' experience, plate types, and the marginal mandibular branch-traversing approach (deep/superficial group). We employed generalized estimating equations (GEEs) for repeated measurements throughout the 6-month follow-up period. RESULTS: Among 102 patients with 114 fractures, 27 patients (26.5%) developed FNI within 1 week. Prolonged FNI (≥ 1 month) occurred in 19 (19.2%) of 99 patients. Multivariate GEE analyses revealed that deep surgical approaches (i.e., traditional submandibular and retroparotid approaches; odds ratio [OR], 18.90; p = 0.011), fractures with dislocation (OR, 3.60; p = 0.025), and female gender (OR, 2.71; p = 0.040) were independently associated with the overall FNI risk. Additionally, the deep approaches (OR, 15.91; p = 0.014) and female gender (OR, 3.41; p = 0.035) were correlated with a prolonged FNI risk. Sensitivity analyses for the outcomes identified the same predictors. CONCLUSION: The predictors longitudinally associated with FNI in CN/SCF surgeries included a deep MMB-traversing approach, dislocated fracture, and female gender. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: The superficial surgical approaches (i.e., transparotid, transmasseteric anteroparotid, and high perimandibular approaches) should be adopted for CN/SCF treatment to minimize postoperative morbidity, especially for female patients with dislocated condyles.
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Traumatismos do Nervo Facial/etiologia , Fixação Interna de Fraturas/efeitos adversos , Fraturas Mandibulares/cirurgia , Adulto , Idoso , Nervo Facial , Feminino , Humanos , Estudos Longitudinais , Masculino , Côndilo Mandibular , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Estudos Retrospectivos , Fatores de Risco , Resultado do Tratamento , Adulto JovemRESUMO
Condylar fractures alone accounts to about 25% to 40% of all the fractures of mandible. Management of condylar fractures has always been a controversy. Nowadays there has been more emphasis on open reduction of condylar fractures by the surgeons.The reasons could be the result of complications of closed reduction where the patient may not be able to masticate properly and deviation still present thereby the structural and functional loss forcing the surgeons' choice to open up. The anterior parotid approach has lesser risk of injury to parotid gland and also to facial nerve we attempted to use mini retro mandibular access for such fractures. So the aim was to explore the feasibility of the mini retro mandibular approach to sub condylar fractures. The patients reported to the department of oral and maxillofacial surgery department clinically and radio logically diagnosed and treated for condylar fractures were included. The maximal mouth opening, protrusive and lateral excursive movements, midline orientation with opposing arch, scar visibility, sialocele and facial nerve weakness were all recorded post operatively and compared with pre-operative recording. The mini retro mandibular access with anterior parotid transmessetric approach to sub condylar fractures can be the choice for the surgical management of sub condylar fractures which is absolutely easy, reliable, with less visible scar and with less chances of landing in facial nerve complications.
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The dilemma regarding the management of condylar fractures generally revolves around the surgical approach, implant design, and the surgeon's experience. Zide and Kent's guidelines streamlined the decision making process for condylar fractures. However, there exists no standardized protocol for reduction and fixation of condylar fractures. Here, we have described a detailed and stepwise protocol, common to any surgical approach, that would lead to predictable, reproducible, and repeatable results in every surgeon's hands.
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STUDY DESIGN: A prospective randomized comparative study was conducted to evaluate the clinical and radiological outcomes of the retromandibular transparotid (RMT) approach with endoscopic-assisted transoral (ENDO) approach used for open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF) of adult mandibular subcondylar fractures. OBJECTIVES: To evaluate and compare the primary functional outcome using the Helkimo's dysfunction index, the surgical ease, the incidence of facial nerve weakness, the cosmetic outcomes and the number of complications following ORIF of mandibular subcodylar fractures using the RMT and ENDO approaches. METHODS: In this prospective study, 20 patients with unilateral/bilateral subcondylay fractures requiring ORIF were recruited between 2017 and 2018. Patients were randomly divided into RMT and ENDO group, 10 patients in each. Clinical and radiological assessment was done preoperatively and in postoperative period it was done at different intervals over the period of 6 months. The intraoperative parameter time taken during surgery was correlated for association with the time elasped since day of trauma and with the fracture severity. Similarly, the presence of multiple fractures of the mandible and postoperative occlusion were evaluated for the association. RESULTS: Comparable functional results were noted in both groups without any statistical significance. ORIF in ENDO group proved to be more time-consuming. For the RMT group, visible scars were rated best or close to best at the end of 6 months but a greater number of facial nerve injuries were reported in the RMT group. CONCLUSIONS: Superiority of one approach over others cannot be established since the outcomes were not statistically different. However, the ENDO approach appears to be safer. Therefore, there is a need for the development of innovative armamentarium which would improve the dexterity and ease of the surgeon and hence the total time taken for this minimally invasive approach for the management of subcondylar fracture.
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Background Fractures of the mandibular condyle are common and account for 25% to 50% of all fractures of the mandible. Various methods exist for open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF) of condylar fractures. This study was done to explore three-dimensional (3D) plates as a viable option. Aim This study aims to evaluate the effectiveness of 3D trapezoidal plates in open reduction and internal fixation of subcondylar fractures. Materials and methodology This was a non-randomized clinical trial conducted on 20 patients who reported at the Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Tamil Nadu Government Dental College and Hospital, Chennai, India. The ORIF was done under general anesthesia. A retromandibular transmasseteric approach was used to expose the fracture site, and the fracture was stabilized using 3D titanium trapezoidal plates. Parameters, such as mouth opening, mandibular deviation, occlusion, surgical accessibility, fracture reduction, adaptability, the difference in ramal height, angulation of the fractured condyle, operative time, facial nerve weakness, implant failure, complications, and scar formation were assessed. Statistical analysis was done using Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS), version 21 (IBM SPSS Statistics for Windows, Armonk, NY). Results There was an improvement in mouth opening and occlusion in the immediate postoperative period. The surgical accessibility ranged from good to excellent. The fracture reduction was excellent in 60% of patients and good in 40%. In one patient, there was a transient weakness of the marginal mandibular nerve which recovered by three months. Another patient had a wound infection that subsided within the first postoperative week. None of the patients had a device failure during the six-month follow-up period. Conclusion The trapezoidal 3D plates could be considered as a viable option for treating subcondylar fractures of the mandible in terms of surgical accessibility, stability, ease of device placement, stability of reduced fracture, reduced osteosynthesis material requirement, and minimal damage to the surrounding tissues.
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The aim of this study was to investigate the probability of facial nerve injury (FNI) in the treatment of condylar neck and subcondylar fractures (CN/SCFs) with percutaneous approaches and to identify factors predicting FNI. The data of 80 patients with 87 CN/SCFs were evaluated retrospectively. The primary outcome was FNI occurrence. The predictor variables were age, sex, aetiology, alcohol consumption, fracture site and pattern (dislocation or not), concomitant fractures, time interval to surgery, surgeon experience, plate type, and the dual classification of percutaneous approaches. The approaches were classified based on whether subcutaneous dissection traversed the marginal mandibular branch (MMB) deeply (deep group: submandibular and retroparotid approaches) or superficially (superficial group: transparotid, transmasseteric anteroparotid (TMAP), and high cervical-TMAP approaches). Twenty-two patients (27.5%) suffered FNI, of whom two in the deep group had permanent paralysis of the MMB. In the multivariate logistic regression model, deeply traversing surgery approaches (odds ratio 12.4, P=0.025) and the presence of a dislocated fracture (odds ratio 6.66, P=0.012) were associated with an increased risk of FNI. These results suggest that percutaneous approaches in the superficial group should be recommended for the treatment of CN/SCFs to reduce the risk of FNI.
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Traumatismos do Nervo Facial , Fraturas Mandibulares , Nervo Facial , Fixação Interna de Fraturas , Humanos , Côndilo Mandibular , Estudos RetrospectivosRESUMO
Mandible fractures commonly occur in patients who have sustained blunt facial trauma, and the subcondylar region is the most frequently fractured due to its intrinsic biomechanical weakness. The maxillary artery lies in close relation to the medial cortex of the subcondyle and is vulnerable to injury by the sharp edges of the fracture fragments during the initial trauma or during operative fracture reduction. Maxillary artery injuries and subcondylar fractures may be an underdiagnosed phenomenon. Yet, this is of clinical significance as the maxillary artery caliber is usually of significant caliber and may lead to substantial hemorrhage. Surgical access to the artery for hemostasis is challenging and is further compounded by small surgical incisions usually undertaken for fracture fixation, obscuring of the artery by the overlying fracture fragments, and vessel retraction following its transection. In cases where maxillary artery injury is suspected, an open surgical approach may be favored over an endoscopic one. The authors illustrate a case in which brisk hemorrhage from the maxillary artery encountered during a preauricular approach to fixation of the mandible subcondyle was successfully controlled with temporary pressure on the external carotid artery through a neck incision and direct ligation of the lacerated maxillary artery. The authors then discuss diagnosis and treatment of such maxillary artery injuries and propose a novel diagnostic and treatment algorithm.
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Mandibular condylar neck fractures and subcondylar fractures represent, respectively, 19-29% and 62-70% of all mandibular fractures; treatment involves some problems, common to both, concerning the choice of an adequate approach. Herewith, personal experience is reported related to the surgical treatment of some cases of mandibular condylar neck and subcondylar fractures by transparotid approaches with partial parotidectomy, removing the salivary tissue overlying the condylar neck and/or the subcondylar region. Over the last 5 years, we observed 22 fractures of the condylar neck and 10 fractures of the subcondylar region. In 13 patients (11 male, 2 female, age range 10-68 years, mean 33 years), 10 of whom had other mandibular and/or other maxillo-facial and skeleton fractures - 50% of these with dislocated condylar heads - and the other 3 for their free choice, regarding the different treatments, 18 transparotid approaches with partial parotidectomy (bilateral in 5 cases), were performed reducing and fixing 12 condylar neck fractures and 5 subcondylar region fractures with appropriate plates (2.0 mm) and screws. After surgery, no intermaxillary fixation was performed. Complications included 4 salivary fistulae (bilateral in 1 patient), which closed spontaneously after 4 or 5 weeks with a dressing, 1 case of Frey's syndrome, which healed after 2 treatments with botulin and 6 cases of transient facial palsy lasting 4-8 weeks (1 case bilateral) affecting zygomatic, buccal and marginal mandibular nerves. During follow-up, functional parameters considered were: restoration of original pre-injury occlusion; vertical, lateral and protrusion mandibular movements. All patients re-acquired the original pre-injury occlusion; the maximal post-operative intrinsical distance was at least 40 mm after a variable period of rehabilitation and lateral and protrusion movements also led to satisfactory final results. All patients were free of pain and had no deflection or clicking upon opening or chewing. None suffered from haematoma, miniplate fractures, bone resorption or condylar necrosis. In our experience, the Transparotid approaches with partial parotidectomy permits very good anatomical repositioning of the displaced condylar or subcondylar osseous segments in all cases, since isolation of the facial nerve branches and removal of a limited part of the parotid gland tissue overlying the lesion allow perfect exposure of the fracture site. The wide operation field allows the facial nerve to be preserved and permits easy internal rigid fixation with plates, as the drill, screws and screwdriver can be positioned exactly perpendicular to the bone surface instead of obliquely, as occurs with many different approaches.