EMCrit 404 – Facial Trauma

EMCrit 404 – Facial Trauma


The Paper

Look Me in the Face and Tell Me That I Needed to Be Transferred: Defining the Criteria for Transferring Patients with Isolated Facial Injuries [10.1097/TA.0000000000004651]

 

Bellal Joseph, MD FACS

Dr. Bellal Joseph is the Martin Gluck Endowed Professor of Surgery, Professor of Neurosurgery, Chief of General Surgery and Chief Division of Trauma, Critical Care, Burns & Emergency Surgery, at the University of Arizona. He is also the Vice Chair of Research for the Department of Surgery.

 

Imaging

Who are you getting specific Face CTs on?

Who are you getting temporal cuts on?

Clear Nasal Sinus Sign

Thanks to Emile Legendre for sending these two papers:

[32035837]

[9371108]

Will miss zygomatic arch and nasal bone fractures

Transfer of Facial Trauma (Facial Injury Guidelines)

 

Upper Facial Bone Fxs

Frontal Sinus Fractures

  • All should get transferred
  • Look for cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) rhinorrhea
  • All are going to get either observation or operation

Middle Facial Bone Fxs

Radiology Tip: if there is no opacification of the maxillary sinuses, then the only fracture you will miss is a nasal bone fracture

Orbital Fractures

Transfer if decreased visual acuity, diplopia, restricted ocular motility, retrobulbar hemorrhage, or comminuted fracture

Zygomatic Arch, Nasal Bone, Maxillary Sinus Fractures

May need drainage of septal hematoma

Easier to reduce nasal fractures when swelling goes down

Alveolar fracture doesn’t preclude discharge

Zygomaticomaxillary Complex Fractures

Here the complex refers to the components of the fracture pattern, not the complexity

aka quadripod fracture or quadramalar fracture

Transfer if diplopia or decreased visual acuity (On the show, we agreed, decreased ocular motility as well)

Transfer Naso-Orbito-Ethmoid Fractures (NOE) these fxs connote a high mechanism injury

 

Le Fort Fractures

Type I – Do not transfer

Type II/III – transfer

Lower Facial Bone Fxs

Maxillary Alveolar and Hard Palate Fractures

Do not transfer

Speak with consultants for malocclusion–depends on ability to get the pt in for follow-up

Mandibular Fractures

Transfer bilateral mandibular fractures or condylar fractures

Soft Tissue Injuries

Transfer if >2cm of flap defect or missing tissue, neurologic signs/symptoms, eyelid or glove laceration

Neuro signs and symptoms include loss of sensation, paresthesia, and facial muscle weakness

Additional Tips

Remember to Check the Hearing

Some of these fractures and penetrating injuries can affect the auditory apparatus

Midface Hemorrhage

 

Additional New Information

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Scott Weingart, MD FCCM
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