14 research outputs found

    Bilateral bifid condyles: A rare etiology of temporomandibular joint disorders.

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    Basckgroud: Bifid mandibular condyle (BMC) is a rare etiology of temporomandibular joint (TMJ) disorders characterized by a duplication of the head of the mandibular condyle. Case report: The authors report the case of a 20-year-old patient complaining of a painful and clicking TMJ and mandibular hypomobility, which had been progressing for several months. Radiological investigations (dental panoramic radiograph and X-ray CT scan) revealed right and left abnormalities of the TMJ due to bilateral BMC requiring surgical management. Conclusion: Despite a prevalence of 0.31% to 1.82% and the controversies surrounding its pathophysiology, maxillofacial surgeons should be aware of BMC to avoid misdiagnosis related to the clinical presentation (pain, clicking, hypomobility, or ankylosis) and provide adequate management

    Functional and Aesthetic Factors Associated with Revision of Rhinoplasty

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    Background:. Surgical revision rate of rhinoplasty is from 5% to 15% in literature. The aims of our study were to define the rate and the predictive factors for surgical revision of rhinoplasty. Methods:. We have realized a single-center case/control study including 62 patients who underwent surgical revision among 732 patients who underwent closed rhinoplasty between 2005 and 2015. Data of each rhinoplasty were collected from medical records and photographs. Statistical analyses were used. Results:. The surgical revision rate was 8.6%. After multivariate analysis, 4 factors were statistically significant and independently associated with surgical revision: “preexisting respiratory functional disorder” [odds ratio OR = 3.30; 95% CI (1.47–7.76); P = 0.004], “wide nasal bone and side walls” [OR = 3.94; 95% CI (1.49–11.25); P = 0.007], “deviated nasal bone and side walls” [OR = 2.68; 95% CI [1.14–6.58]; P = 0.02] and the use of camouflage grafts [OR = 0.26; 95% CI [0.07–0.89]; P = 0.04]. Conclusions:. Closed rhinoplasties have similar revision rate to open techniques. Revision surgeries are justified by functional or aesthetic disorders. The interests of this study are to better inform patients and to adapt operative management. We provide here some recommendations with focus on the keys to successful rhinoplasty surgery

    Challenges in lower face soft tissue reconstruction: The value of the historical bipedicled scalp flap procedure.

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    Dear Sir, Lower lip and chin reconstructions are challenging, since satisfactory aesthetic and function outcomes in the mouth region are difficult to achieve. Although various techniques for lower lip and chin reconstruction have been described, some cannot be applied in patients with disease recurrence, the failure of previous procedures, or a history of radiotherapy. [...

    Endosteal blood supply of the mandible: anatomical study of nutrient vessels in the condylar neck accessory foramina.

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    In the mandible, the condylar neck vascularization is commonly described as mainly periosteal; while the endosteal contribution is still debated, with very limited anatomical studies. Previous works have shown the contribution of nutrient vessels through accessory foramina and their contribution in the blood supply of other parts of the mandible. Our aim was to study the condylar neck's blood supply from nutrient foramina. Six latex-injected heads were dissected and two hundred mandibular condyles were observed on dry mandibles searching for accessory bone foramina. Latex-injected dissections showed a direct condylar medular arterial supply through foramina. On dry mandibles, these foramina were most frequently observed in the pterygoid fovea in 91% of cases. However, two other accessory foramina areas were identified on the lateral and medial sides of the mandibular condylar process, confirming the vascular contribution of transverse facial and maxillary arteries. The maxillary artery indeed provided both endosteal and periosteal blood supply to the condylar neck, with three different branches: an intramedullary ascending artery (arising from the inferior alveolar artery), a direct nutrient branch and some pterygoid osteomuscular branches

    A three-gene expression signature associated with positive surgical margins in tongue squamous cell carcinomas: Predicting surgical resectability from tumour biology?

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    International audienceObjectives: Achieving complete tumour resection is one of the main goals of surgery for head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) tumours. Whether biological characteristics of tumours contribute to the surgical resectability and the presence of positive surgical margins (SM) after resection of HNSCC is unclear. We aimed to address this issue.Materials and methods: We used data from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) to relate the SM status of 356 HNSCC tumours covering five major primary locations (tongue, larynx, tonsils, floor of mouth and buccal mucosa) with data from multiple omics approaches (transcriptomic, genomic and proteomic analyses).Results: We identified three differentially expressed genes whose expression was significantly associated with the presence of positive SM in tongue tumours (n = 144). The three genes (CCDC66, ZRANB2 and VCPKMT) displayed significantly higher mRNA levels in tongue tumours with positive SM compared to tumours with negative SM. The corresponding gene expression signature identified tongue tumours with a positive SM with high sensitivity and specificity (85% and 76%, respectively, Area Under the Curve (AUC) = 0.84). Tongue tumours with this signature were characterised by a high grade, elevated proliferation levels and a tumour stroma with fewer fibroblasts and endothelial cells.Conclusion: Positive SM were found to be strikingly associated with tumour biology in tongue tumours. These findings offer interesting perspectives for biomarker identification and precision surgery in these tumours

    DIVA, a 3D virtual reality platform, improves undergraduate craniofacial trauma education

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    International audienceCraniofacial fractures management is challenging to teach due to the complex anatomy of the head, even when using three-dimensional CT-scan images. DIVA is a software allowing the straightforward visualization of CT-scans in a user-friendly three-dimensional virtual reality environment. Here, we assess DIVA as an educational tool for craniofacial trauma for undergraduate medical students. Three craniofacial trauma cases (jaw fracture, naso-orbital-ethmoid complex fracture and Le Fort 3 fracture) were submitted to 50 undergraduate medical students, who had to provide diagnoses and treatment plans. Each student then filled an 8-item questionnaire assessing satisfaction, potential benefit, ease of use and tolerance. Additionally, 4 postgraduate students were requested to explore these cases and to place 6 anatomical landmarks on both virtual reality renderings and usual slice-based three-dimensional CT-scan visualizations. High degrees of satisfaction (98%) without specific tolerance issues (86%) were reported. The potential benefit in a better understanding of craniofacial trauma using virtual reality was reported by almost all students (98%). Virtual reality allowed a reliable localization of key anatomical landmarks when compared with standard three-dimensional CT-scan visualization. Virtual reality interfaces such DIVA are beneficial to medical students for a better understanding of craniofacial trauma and allow a reliable rendering of craniofacial anatomy
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