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Frontal sinus trauma in children
Author(s) -
Violeta-Anca Epure,
Bucureşti Spitalul Clinic de Urgenţă pentru Copii „M.S. Curie“,
Dan Cristian Gheorghe,
Bucureşti Universitatea de Medicină și Farmacie „Carol Davila“
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
romanian medical journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2069-606X
pISSN - 1220-5478
DOI - 10.37897/rmj.2016.1.12
Subject(s) - frontal sinus , skull , craniofacial , medicine , conservative treatment , facial trauma , frontal bone , sinus (botany) , surgery , conservative management , anatomy , orthodontics , biology , botany , psychiatry , genus
Due to necessity of huge impact forces, fractures of the frontal sinus rarely occur isolated, they are mostly seen in association with other craniofacial or skull base lesions. The treatment of frontal sinus fractures in children has become more conservative in the last decades, due to increased accuracy of imaging techniques and endoscopy. Craniofacial CT is the golden standard in such cases. The choice of treatment varies in each particular case, depending on the presence of rinoliquoreea or involvement of nasofrontal recesses; the aim is to be as conservative as possible, in order not to interfere with the growing of the child’s face. The authors present two cases of complex facial trauma, both involving the posterior wall of the frontal sinus; still, the management was conservative in those cases.

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