Chapter 3 - Craniofacial Trauma Flashcards

1
Q

Physical signs of temporal bone fracture: (3)

A
  1. Hemotympanum
  2. CSF otorrhea
  3. Ecchymosis
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2
Q

CT scan findings that should raise suspicion of temporal bone fracture: (4)

A
  1. Opacification of the mastoid air cells
  2. Fluid in the middle ear cavity
  3. Pneumocephalus
  4. Pneumolabyrunth (occasional)
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3
Q

Classification of temporal bone fractures (According to orientation): (3)

A
  1. Longitudinal Fracture
  2. Transverse Fracture
  3. Mixed fracture
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4
Q

This represents 70 to 90% of temporal bone fractures

A

Longitudinal temporal bone fracture

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5
Q

What are the complications of longitudinal temporal bone fractures? (5)

A
  1. Conductive hearing loss
  2. Dislocation or fracture of the ossicles
  3. CSF otorhinorrhea
  4. Facial nerve palsy (often delayed or incomplete)
  5. Sensorineural hearing loss
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6
Q

Transverse temporal bone fracture usually results from a blow to what area of the head?

A

Occiput or frontal region

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7
Q

What are the complications of transverse temporal bone fractures? (6)

A

Usually more severe:

  1. Sensorineural hearing loss
  2. Severe vertigo
  3. Nystagmus
  4. Perilymphatic fistula
  5. Facial palsy (30 to 50% - often complete)
  6. May involve carotid canal or jugular foramen (Carotid artery or jugular vein injury)
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8
Q

Compared with otic-sparing fractures, patients with otic capsule-violating fractures are more severe.

Why?

A

They are:
2 to 5 times more likely to develop facial injury.
4 to 8 times more likely to develop CSF leak
7 to 25 times more likely to experience hearing loss
More likely to sustain intracranial injuries (epidural hematoma and subarachnoid hemorrhage)

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9
Q

Modality of choice for the evaluation of facial trauma

A

MDCT

  • Supplanted plain film radiography
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10
Q

What are the four views usually used in plain film evaluation of acute facial trauma?

A
  1. Caldwell view
  2. Shallow Waters view
  3. Cross-table lateral view
    4 Submental vertex view
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11
Q

What are the uses of MR in facial injury? (3)

A
  1. Injury of the orbital contents (optic nerve, globe, extraocular muscles)
  2. Vascular complications (arterial dissection, pseudoaneurysm, and arteriovenous fistulas
  3. Best way to evaluate trauma to the temporomandibular joint
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12
Q

When is angiography indicated in facial trauma?

A

When clinical or radiographic evidence suggest a vascular injury

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13
Q

Orbital emphysema is commonly caused by fracture of what bone?

A

Fracture of the thin medial orbital wall

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14
Q

The most common fracture of the facial skeleton.

A

Nasal bone fracture

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15
Q

Potential serious injury in nasal fracture that can cause cartilage necrosis (by disrupting the blood supply)

A

Septal hematoma

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