| Literature DB >> 23248598 |
Catharine B Garland1, Jason H Pomerantz.
Abstract
Craniofacial disorders present markedly complicated problems in reconstruction because of the complex interactions of the multiple, simultaneously affected tissues. Regenerative medicine holds promise for new strategies to improve treatment of these disorders. This review addresses current areas of unmet need in craniofacial reconstruction and emphasizes how craniofacial tissues differ from their analogs elsewhere in the body. We present a problem-based approach to illustrate current treatment strategies for various craniofacial disorders, to highlight areas of need, and to suggest regenerative strategies for craniofacial bone, fat, muscle, nerve, and skin. For some tissues, current approaches offer excellent reconstructive solutions using autologous tissue or prosthetic materials. Thus, new "regenerative" approaches would need to offer major advantages in order to be adopted. In other tissues, the unmet need is great, and we suggest the greatest regenerative need is for muscle, skin, and nerve. The advent of composite facial tissue transplantation and the development of regenerative medicine are each likely to add important new paradigms to our treatment of craniofacial disorders.Entities:
Keywords: craniofacial; facial nerve; fat transfer; regeneration; satellite cell; stem cell
Year: 2012 PMID: 23248598 PMCID: PMC3521957 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2012.00453
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
Examples of craniofacial disorders and corresponding unmet “regenerative” needs.
| Disease | Tissue defects | Current strategies | Regenerative need |
|---|---|---|---|
| Craniosynostosis | Early bony suture fusion, aberrant skull growth if untreated | Successful bone regeneration after surgery if treated before age one | Promoting complete regeneration of the skull after surgery in all cases |
| Cleft lip/palate | Deficiency of palatal fusion including bone, muscle, and mucosa | Staged surgical repairs | Mucosa, without scarring that limits bone growth and causes maxillary deficiency |
| Secondary deformities from inadequate growth after surgical intervention | Alveolar bone grafting | Elimination of bone graft donor site morbidity | |
| Craniofacial microsomia | Deficient bone and soft tissue development of the face | Distraction osteogenesis Fat grafting Free tissue transfer | Multiple structures are hypoplastic: bone, muscle, skin, cartilage, nerve |
| Microtia | Deficient and abnormal ear cartilage formation | Reconstruction with rib graft or alloplastic material | A functional reproduction of a normal ear without requiring a rib graft, and with less scarring |
| Moebius | Bilateral facial paralysis due to underdevelopment of cranial nerves | Free tissue transfer | Cranial nerve generation, or regeneration |
| Burn | Need for full skin coverage | Split-thickness skin grafting | Regenerated complete skin organ (epidermis, dermis, and appendages) |
| Secondary deformities associated with scar contracture and loss of cartilaginous support | Fat and skin grafting to contractures | Supple, well-vascularized skin replacement with underlying cartilage framework | |
| Fractures | Bone gaps occasionally present due to trauma, malunion, or non-union | Fixation | Regeneration of large defects |
| Soft tissue atrophy or tissue loss due to injury | May affect fat, muscle, skin, cartilages, mucosa, or nerves | Fat grafting | “Composite tissue” regeneration to replace subtle and complex form and function |
| Skin grafting | |||
| Face transplantation | |||
| Oropharyngeal or other facial cancers | Bone, soft tissue, muscle, and nerve may be radically resected | Free tissue transfer | “Composite tissue” regeneration to replace subtle and complex form and function |
| Radiation | Negatively affects skin and soft tissue elasticity and healing; causes osteoradionecrosis | Fat grafting Bone grafting | Skin regeneration Bone regeneration |
| Bell’s palsy | Facial nerve paralysis | Micro-neurovascular free muscle transfer | Nerve and muscle regeneration to achieve complex function of multiple muscles |
| Parry-Romberg/progressive hemifacial atrophy | Progressive loss of soft tissue, nerve, muscle | Fat grafting | Fat regeneration |
| Fat atrophy | Fat grafting | Rejuvenation of skin quality | |
| Loss of skin elasticity | Skin resurfacing | Rejuvenation of fat quantity and location | |
| Changes in skin pigmentation | |||
Figure 1Cranial neural crest cells have unique contributions to tissues of the face and head. Ectodermal derivatives are in blue, mesodermal derivatives in red, and endodermal derivatives in purple. In green are the components of these tissues that develop primarily from cranial neural crest cells. In the face and head, cranial neural crest cells contribute to bone, cartilage, and fat, while this is not the case in the trunk and extremities. While all of the craniofacial muscles arise from the mesoderm (red), note that different muscle groups develop from different regions of the mesoderm. References to the developmental origins of the structures in this figure are located throughout the manuscript.
Figure 2A computed tomography scan demonstrates a large defect (arrow) in the left frontoparietal skull of a 3-year-old boy. This required reconstruction with alloplastic materials or large bone grafts.
Figure 3Computed tomography scans of an infant with multiple suture synostosis preoperatively (A) and 4 months after distraction of the posterior cranial vault (B). The distraction footplates have been gradually separated by a distance of 25 mm and evidence of calcified bony regenerate is present between the footplates (arrow).
Figure 4Autologous fat transfer to treat facial soft tissue deficiency. A man with severe HIV lipodystrophy [(A), preoperative photo] underwent serial fat grafting to both malar regions [(B), post-operative photo]. This restored normal facial contour and a more youthful appearance. (C) Preoperative photo of a patient with post-traumatic soft tissue atrophy on the right side of his face had long lasting improvements in facial symmetry after several sessions of fat grafting from the abdomen to the right cheek and jaw region [(D), post-operative photo). In both cases lipoaspirate was processed by brief centrifugation and passage through a syringe. The cells within the lipoaspirate were not altered or enriched for specific cell types. Multiple injections of very small quantities of fat were used in each treatment.
Figure 5This man suffers from the inability to look upward with his left eye after permanent injury to the left superior rectus muscle.
Figure 6(A) A girl with congenital right-sided facial paralysis demonstrates asymmetry with smiling. She was treated with free gracilis muscle transfer. (B) The muscle is inset to the zygoma and the oral commissure. The new vascular supply to the muscle is shown on the blue background. The muscle was innervated by the nerve to masseter (not shown).
Figure 7A young man with full thickness burns of the face and scalp (A) prior to debridement and (B) after cadaveric skin graft placement. He required multiple operations prior to final skin grafting.