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Understanding Why Lateral Osteotomy During Rhinoplasty Can Be Performed Safely

Background: Lateral osteotomy is a mainstay of rhinoplasty surgery and involves fracture of the nasal and maxillary bones to narrow or widen the nasal dorsal bridge and base. To avoid nasal midvault collapse following rhinoplasty, the accepted “high-low-high” lateral osteotomy technique advocates fo...

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Autores principales: Mowlavi, Arian, Kim, Jay B., Molinatti, Natalia, Saadat, Sean, Sharifi-Amina, Soheil, Wilhelmi, Bradon J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Open Science Company, LLC 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6448222/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30996764
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author Mowlavi, Arian
Kim, Jay B.
Molinatti, Natalia
Saadat, Sean
Sharifi-Amina, Soheil
Wilhelmi, Bradon J.
author_facet Mowlavi, Arian
Kim, Jay B.
Molinatti, Natalia
Saadat, Sean
Sharifi-Amina, Soheil
Wilhelmi, Bradon J.
author_sort Mowlavi, Arian
collection PubMed
description Background: Lateral osteotomy is a mainstay of rhinoplasty surgery and involves fracture of the nasal and maxillary bones to narrow or widen the nasal dorsal bridge and base. To avoid nasal midvault collapse following rhinoplasty, the accepted “high-low-high” lateral osteotomy technique advocates for the preservation of a triangular strut of maxillary bone when initiating the osteotomy. Objective: We evaluated the risk of starting a lateral osteotomy in the “high” position to leave the aforementioned triangular maxillary strut without risk of falling into the nasomaxillary suture line, which can result in an aberrant and uncontrolled fracture. Methods: We utilized high-definition computed tomographic scans to reconstruct layered 3-dimensional images of 20 patient skulls and measured the distance from the rhinion (most inferior point of the central nasal bone junction) to the nasomaxillary suture line and from the rhinion to the maxillary groove. Results: We found that the nasomaxillary suture line was reliably only halfway down the bony nasal pyramid and not in proximity to the maxillary groove. Conclusions: Our findings provide reassurance that a generous triangular strut can be preserved along the maxillary component of the piriform aperture without concern of falling into the nasomaxillary suture line. Thus, controlled lateral osteotomies can be performed safely to achieve aesthetic gains without fear of compromising midvault stability.
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spelling pubmed-64482222019-04-17 Understanding Why Lateral Osteotomy During Rhinoplasty Can Be Performed Safely Mowlavi, Arian Kim, Jay B. Molinatti, Natalia Saadat, Sean Sharifi-Amina, Soheil Wilhelmi, Bradon J. Eplasty Journal Article Background: Lateral osteotomy is a mainstay of rhinoplasty surgery and involves fracture of the nasal and maxillary bones to narrow or widen the nasal dorsal bridge and base. To avoid nasal midvault collapse following rhinoplasty, the accepted “high-low-high” lateral osteotomy technique advocates for the preservation of a triangular strut of maxillary bone when initiating the osteotomy. Objective: We evaluated the risk of starting a lateral osteotomy in the “high” position to leave the aforementioned triangular maxillary strut without risk of falling into the nasomaxillary suture line, which can result in an aberrant and uncontrolled fracture. Methods: We utilized high-definition computed tomographic scans to reconstruct layered 3-dimensional images of 20 patient skulls and measured the distance from the rhinion (most inferior point of the central nasal bone junction) to the nasomaxillary suture line and from the rhinion to the maxillary groove. Results: We found that the nasomaxillary suture line was reliably only halfway down the bony nasal pyramid and not in proximity to the maxillary groove. Conclusions: Our findings provide reassurance that a generous triangular strut can be preserved along the maxillary component of the piriform aperture without concern of falling into the nasomaxillary suture line. Thus, controlled lateral osteotomies can be performed safely to achieve aesthetic gains without fear of compromising midvault stability. Open Science Company, LLC 2019-04-01 /pmc/articles/PMC6448222/ /pubmed/30996764 Text en Copyright © 2019 The Author(s) http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ This is an open-access article whereby the authors retain copyright of the work. The article is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Journal Article
Mowlavi, Arian
Kim, Jay B.
Molinatti, Natalia
Saadat, Sean
Sharifi-Amina, Soheil
Wilhelmi, Bradon J.
Understanding Why Lateral Osteotomy During Rhinoplasty Can Be Performed Safely
title Understanding Why Lateral Osteotomy During Rhinoplasty Can Be Performed Safely
title_full Understanding Why Lateral Osteotomy During Rhinoplasty Can Be Performed Safely
title_fullStr Understanding Why Lateral Osteotomy During Rhinoplasty Can Be Performed Safely
title_full_unstemmed Understanding Why Lateral Osteotomy During Rhinoplasty Can Be Performed Safely
title_short Understanding Why Lateral Osteotomy During Rhinoplasty Can Be Performed Safely
title_sort understanding why lateral osteotomy during rhinoplasty can be performed safely
topic Journal Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6448222/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30996764
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