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Middle Eastern Rhinoplasty: Relationship of the Nasal Spine and Caudal Septum to Tip Projection and Columellar‐Labial Angle
Author(s) -
Arden Richard L.,
Baldwin Brett J.,
Coffey Mary P.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
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Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2473-974X
DOI - 10.1177/2473974x17742857
Subject(s) - rhinoplasty , nose , medicine , orthodontics , nasal septum , anatomy
Objective To measure the anterior nasal spine length (ANSL) and septal caudal extension (SCE), as well as assess the strength of association between these variables and tip projection in the Middle Eastern nose. Our secondary aim was to assess if columellar‐labial angle (CLA) or columellar‐spinal angle (CSA) vary as a function of ANSL and/or SCE. Study Design/Setting Prospective single institutional study. Subjects Middle Eastern primary rhinoplasty patients without nasal trauma or prior endonasal surgical history. Methods Photographic and intraoperative caliper measurements were used to determine Goode ratio (GR), CLA, CSA, ANSL, and SCE. Associations between numeric variables were examined with scatterplots, including use of LOWESS curves and Pearson correlation coefficients. Linear regression models were used for predicting quantitative variables (GR, CLA, CSA). Logistic regression models were used for predicting overprojection status based on GR. Results In total, 102 patients met inclusion criteria (82 females, 20 males). Mean ANSL and SCE were 8.6 mm and 14.9 mm, respectively; ANSL and SCE had a strong positive association with each other. SCE and ANSL were found to have low predictability for GR, CLA, or CSA. Conclusion Determinations of projection status using the GR method do not appear to be related to ANSL or SCE values in our Middle Eastern study group. Relationships of absolute columellar‐labial or columellar‐spinal angles are likely more complex than isolated value implications of SCE or ANSL.

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