Medicine and Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery: Medicine and Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery

    

Nasolabial soft tissue effects of segmented and non-segmented Le Fort I osteotomy using a modified alar cinch technique-a cone beam computed tomography evaluation

(*):
Raithatha R, Naini FB, Patel S, Sherriff M, Witherow
H. Long-term stability of limiting nasal alar base width changes with a cinch suture following Le Fort I osteotomy with submental intubation.
Int J Oral Maxillofac Surg 2017;46:1372–9.

Translated from Japanese

clinical Statistics

Clinical Study 13 panfacial fracture cases treated in our department.

Shinsuke Yamamoto 1) Atsushi Maeda 1) Yui Hirai 2) Atsushi Shudo 3) Kyo Uehara 4) Ken Ken Ueike 4) Naoki Taniike 1) Toshihiko Takenobu 1)

1) Department of Dental and Oral Surgery, Kobe City Medical Center

(President: Toshihiko Takenobu)

2) Department of Dental and Oral Surgery, Kobe City Nishi-Kobe Medical Center

(Chief: Taishi Iwaki)

3) Department of Dental and Oral Surgery, Hospital Kishiwada Tokushukai

(Chief: Director Kuroda)

4) Department of Dental and Oral Surgery, Hospital Municipal de Me

(Chief: Director Kayo Tamura)

(Accepted: 3 September 1980)

Clinical evaluation 13 panfacial cases of fractures

Y A M A M O T O S h i n s u k e 1 ) , M A E D A K e i g o 1 ) , H I R A I Y u z o 2 ) , S H U D O A t s u s h i 3 ) , U E H A R A K y O n O r i 4 ) , T A N II K E N una k i 1 ) y Takenobu Toshihiko 1)

1) Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, General Hospital Medical Center City Kobe

(Chief: Dr. TAKENOBU Toshihiko)

2) Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Kobe City Nishi-Kobe Medical Center

(Chief : Dr. IWAKI Futoshi)

3) Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Hospital Kishiwada Tokushukai

(Chief: Dr. KURODA Takashi)

4) Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, City Hospital Ako

(Chief : Dr. TAMURA Kayo)

(Accepted for publication: 3 of September 2019)

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Computer-Assisted 3D Reconstruction in Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery

Year 2019 (Page 76 from the article)
Submental oro-tracheal intubation was developed in order to avoid the need for tracheotomy and to permit unfettered access to the oral region. This type of intubation is done (a) in patients with comminuted fracture of the midface or the nose, where nasal intubation is contraindicated, (b) inpatients who require restoration of the occlusion, and (c) patients whose condition permits extubation at the end of surgery [78]. The neck pathology and normal anatomy can be easily diagnosed using 3-D reconstruction of this submental region to prevent complication of submental intubation.