- Explains the basic principles and concepts of primary traumatic facial injury repair and secondary facial reconstruction.
- Offers expert, up-to-date guidance from global leaders in plastic and reconstructive surgery, otolaryngology and facial plastic surgery, oral maxillofacial surgery, neurosurgery, and oculoplastic surgery.
- Covers innovative topics such as virtual surgical planning, 3D printing, intraoperative surgical navigation, post-traumatic injury, treatment of facial pain, and the roles of microsurgery and facial transplantation in the treatment facial traumatic injuries.
- Includes an end commentary in every chapter provided by Dr. Paul Manson, former Chief of Plastic Surgery at Johns Hopkins Hospital and a pioneer in the field of acute treatment of traumatic facial injuries.
- Offers videos that clarify surgical technique, including intraoperative guidance and imaging; transconjunctival approach to the orbit and reconstruction of a zygomaticomaxillary complex fracture; calvarial bone autograft splitting; dental splinting; a systematic method for reading a craniofacial CT scan; and more.
- Features superb photographs and illustrations throughout, as well as evidence-based summaries in current areas of controversy. - Enhanced eBook version included with purchase. Your enhanced eBook allows you to access all of the text, figures, and references from the book on a variety of devices.
Table of Contents
Section 1: Primary Injury1.1
Assessment of the patient with traumatic facial injury
1.2
Radiological evaluation of the craniofacial skeleton
1.3
Intraoperative imaging and postoperative quality control
1.4
Primary repair soft tissue injury & soft tissue defects
1.5
Traumatic facial nerve injury
1.6
Diagnosis and Multi-Modality Management of Skull Base Fractures and Cerebrospinal Fluid (CSF) Leaks
1.7
Frontal bone and frontal sinus
1.8
Endoscopic Approaches to Frontal and Maxillary Sinus Fractures
1.9
Orbital fractures
1.10
Nasal fractures
1.11
NOE fractures
1.12
Orbital Zygomaticomaxillary Complex Fractures
1.13
Le Fort Fractures
1.14
Mandible fractures
1.15
Fractures of the Condylar Process of the Mandible
1.16
Complications of mandibular fractures
1.17
Temporal bone
1.18
Dental injury; dento-alveolar and segmental fractures of the mandible and maxilla
1.19
Management of panfacial fractures
1.20
Characteristics of Ballistic and Blast Injuries
1.21
Geriatric and edentulous maxillary and mandibular fractures
Section 2: Pediatric Facial Injury
2.1
Pediatric skull fractures
2.2
Superior Pediatric Orbital and Frontal Skull Fractures
2.3
Pediatric orbital fractures
2.4
Pediatric midface fractures
2.5
Pediatric Mandible Fractures
Section 3: Secondary Reconstruction and Restoration
3.1
Reconstruction of Full Thickness Fronto-Cranial Defects
3.2
Pediatric cranial reconstruction
3.3
Secondary reconstruction of facial soft tissue injury and defects
3.4
Ocular considerations: blink, ectropion, entropion, ocular lubrication, DCR
3.5
Secondary Nasoethmoid Fracture Repair
3.6
Post-traumatic nasal deformities
3.7
Secondary orbital reconstruction
3.8
Secondary midfacial reconstruction
3.9
Secondary Osteotomies of the Maxilla and Mandible, and Management of Occlusion
3.10
Secondary traumatic TMJ reconstruction
3.11
Maxillofacial prosthodontics
3.12
Custom craniofacial implants
3.13
Secondary microvascular reconstruction of the traumatic facial injury
3.14
Virtual surgical planning
3.15
Post-traumatic facial pain
3.16
Secondary nerve reconstruction
3.17
Facial transplantation

