Septal Extension Graft in Cleft Rhinoplasty: Patients with Secondary Unilateral Cleft Lip Nasal Deformity.

Autor: Saito T; MFACE Maxillofacial Center Munich., Lonic D; MFACE Maxillofacial Center Munich., Lo CC; MFACE Maxillofacial Center Munich., Tu JC; MFACE Maxillofacial Center Munich., Hattori Y; MFACE Maxillofacial Center Munich., Lo LJ; MFACE Maxillofacial Center Munich.
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Plastic and reconstructive surgery [Plast Reconstr Surg] 2024 Nov 01; Vol. 154 (5), pp. 949e-962e. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Oct 03.
DOI: 10.1097/PRS.0000000000011106
Abstrakt: Background: Tip refinement procedures are still controversial in secondary unilateral cleft rhinoplasty. The aim of this study was to assess whether the septal extension graft improved nasal and tip deformity and achieved a normal profile with clinical and three-dimensional morphometric analyses.
Methods: A consecutive series of 194 skeletally mature patients with unilateral cleft were included and analyzed. All had undergone secondary open rhinoplasty, performed by a single surgeon, with the use of the septal extension graft between 2013 and 2021. Clinical data were collected, and three-dimensional morphometric measurements were performed. An age-, sex-, and ethnicity-matched normal group was included for comparisons.
Results: The authors' standard procedures included open approach combining reverse-U incision, septal extension graft, dorsal augmentation, lip revision, and vermilion augmentation. The postoperative outcome showed significantly increased numerical values (nasal bridge length, nasal height, nasal tip projection, nasal dorsum angle, columellar angle, columellar-lobule angle, nostril height ratio, nasal surface area, nasal volume) and decreased numerical values (alar width, tip/middle deviation, nasal tip angle, labial-columellar angle) compared with the preoperative morphology. The postoperative measurement showed significantly higher numerical values (nasal protrusion, tip/middle deviation, nasal dorsum angle) and lower numerical values (columellar-lobule angle, nostril height ratio, alar width ratio) compared with the control group.
Conclusions: This study revealed that the authors' secondary cleft rhinoplasty significantly improved the underprojected, up-rotated, deviated, and poorly defined tip and short nasal bridge deformities. The technique could result in the nose of the patients with cleft lip nasal deformity being closer to that of the normative profile.
Clinical Question/level of Evidence: Therapeutic, IV.
(Copyright © 2023 by the American Society of Plastic Surgeons.)
Databáze: MEDLINE