| Literature DB >> 31914502 |
Ho Seup Sim1, Dong Gyu Lee1, Jae Ha Hwang1, Kwang Seog Kim1, Sam Yong Lee1.
Abstract
Osteomas are benign, slow-growing osteogenic lesions frequently found in the craniomaxillofacial region. They can be classified as peripheral, central, or extraskeletal. Reactive mechanisms to trauma or infection, as well as muscle traction, are thought to play a major role in the development of peripheral osteomas. In the present report, a 41-year-old woman presented with a slowgrowing, painless mass on her left eyebrow. She had suffered trauma 15 years prior. In the computed tomography scan, a 2.5 × 2 × 0.7-cm radio-opaque tumor was detected just medial to the left supraorbital foramen, and a peripheral osteoma was clinically diagnosed. An elective operation under general anesthesia was planned. Following a suprabrow incision, subcutaneous and intramuscular dissection was performed. In the surgical plane deep to the corrugator muscles and superficial to periosteum, a branch of the supratrochlear nerve was encountered and preserved using a vessel loop. The osteoma beneath the periosteum was extracted in multiple fragments using a chisel and mallet to minimize trauma to the nerve. Contour and facial symmetry were corrected. To use a suprabrow incision, the surgeon must understand neighboring anatomical structures, including the course of the supratrochlear and supraorbital neurovascular bundles. When these structures are located adjacent to tumor lesions, careful surgical maneuvers should be performed to preserve them.Entities:
Keywords: Eyebrow; Forehead; Osteoma
Year: 2019 PMID: 31914502 PMCID: PMC6949501 DOI: 10.7181/acfs.2019.00563
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Craniofac Surg ISSN: 2287-1152
Fig. 1.A 41-year-old female patient presented with a slow-growing, painless mass on her left eyebrow. The mass was 2.5×2 cm in size, firm, round, and hardly movable.
Fig. 2.In the preoperative computed tomography scan, a radioopaque lesion just medial to the left supraorbital foramen was observed.
Fig. 3.In the postoperative computed tomography scan, the tumor lesion was removed and forehead symmetry was well achieved.
Fig. 4.Clinical photograph a week after the operation. Postoperative scars are well hidden, and the contours of the forehead are symmetrical.