| Literature DB >> 23730422 |
Matthew S Yeo1, Terence L H Goh, Vigneswaran Nallathamby, Ee Cherk Cheong, Thiam Chye Lim.
Abstract
Mandible fractures commonly occur in patients who have sustained blunt facial trauma, and the subcondylar region is the most frequently fractured due to its intrinsic biomechanical weakness. The maxillary artery lies in close relation to the medial cortex of the subcondyle and is vulnerable to injury by the sharp edges of the fracture fragments during the initial trauma or during operative fracture reduction. Maxillary artery injuries and subcondylar fractures may be an underdiagnosed phenomenon. Yet, this is of clinical significance as the maxillary artery caliber is usually of significant caliber and may lead to substantial hemorrhage. Surgical access to the artery for hemostasis is challenging and is further compounded by small surgical incisions usually undertaken for fracture fixation, obscuring of the artery by the overlying fracture fragments, and vessel retraction following its transection. In cases where maxillary artery injury is suspected, an open surgical approach may be favored over an endoscopic one. The authors illustrate a case in which brisk hemorrhage from the maxillary artery encountered during a preauricular approach to fixation of the mandible subcondyle was successfully controlled with temporary pressure on the external carotid artery through a neck incision and direct ligation of the lacerated maxillary artery. The authors then discuss diagnosis and treatment of such maxillary artery injuries and propose a novel diagnostic and treatment algorithm.Entities:
Keywords: mandible artery hemorrhage in mandible fractures; maxillary artery injury; maxillary artery pseudoaneurysm; subcondylar fractures
Year: 2012 PMID: 23730422 PMCID: PMC3444024 DOI: 10.1055/s-0032-1313353
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Craniomaxillofac Trauma Reconstr ISSN: 1943-3875