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1.
Rohrich RJ  Muzaffar AR  Janis JE 《Plastic and reconstructive surgery》2004,114(5):1298-308; discussion 1309-12
Dorsal hump reduction can create both functional and aesthetic problems if performed incorrectly. Component dorsal hump reduction allows a graduated approach to the correction of the nasal dorsum by emphasizing the integrity of the upper lateral cartilages when performing dorsal reduction. Use of this approach can minimize the need for spreader grafts in primary rhinoplasty patients. Possible untoward sequelae of dorsal hump reduction include long-term dorsal irregularities caused by uneven resection or overresection or underresection of the osseocartilaginous hump irregularity; the inverted-V deformity; and excessive narrowing of the midvault. The component dorsal hump reduction technique is a five-step method: (1) separation of the upper lateral cartilages from the septum, (2) incremental reduction of the septum proper, (3) dorsal bony reduction, (4) verification by palpation, and (5) final modifications (spreader grafts, suturing techniques, osteotomies). A graduated approach is described that offers control and precision at each interval. Fundamental to the final outcome is the protection and formation of strong dorsal aesthetic lines that define the appearance of the dorsum on frontal view. Furthermore, preservation of the transverse portions of the upper lateral cartilages is essential to maintain patency of the internal nasal valve, maintain the shape of the dorsal aesthetic lines, and avoid the inverted-V deformity. Finally, if needed, spreader grafts are enormously adaptable and can be customized for any deformity (unilateral or bilateral, visible or invisible) to handle functional or aesthetic problems.  相似文献   

2.
The use of alloderm for the correction of nasal contour deformities   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
What rhinoplasty surgeon has not been frustrated by unmet expectations from unreliable graft materials? The quest for an ideal graft continues. Septal cartilage is not always adequate in amount or substance. Ear cartilage may cause unsightly irregularities over time. Cranial bone or rib harvest sites add to the complexity of the procedure and can be intimidating for many operators. This article describes the authors' successful experience with AlloDerm onlay grafts for the correction of nasal contour deformities in 58 primary and secondary rhinoplasty cases by means of the open and endonasal approaches. Forty-two patients received an open-approach procedure; the remaining 16 received grafting through an endonasal or closed approach. Thirty-seven of the patients were secondary rhinoplasty patients, and some underwent multiple nasal corrections. The indications, intraoperative surgical technique of graft placement, and representative results will be discussed. Long-term follow-up showed good results, though partial graft resorption occurred in some patients. Overall, this experience with AlloDerm for nasal augmentation was encouraging.  相似文献   

3.
Erol OO 《Plastic and reconstructive surgery》2000,105(6):2229-41; discussion 2242-3
In nose surgery, carved or crushed cartilage used as a graft has some disadvantages, chiefly that it may be perceptible through the nasal skin after tissue resolution is complete. To overcome these problems and to obtain a smoother surface, the authors initiated the use of Surgicel-wrapped diced cartilage. This innovative technique has been used by the authors on 2365 patients over the past 10 years: in 165 patients with traumatic nasal deformity, in 350 patients with postrhinoplasty deformity, and in 1850 patients during primary rhinoplasty. The highlights of the surgical procedure include harvested cartilage (septal, alar, conchal, and sometimes costal) cut in pieces of 0.5 to 1 mm using a no. 11 blade. The fine-textured cartilage mass is then wrapped in one layer of Surgicel and moistened with an antibiotic (rifamycin). The graft is then molded into a cylindrical form and inserted under the dorsal nasal skin. In the lateral wall and tip of the nose, some overcorrection is performed depending on the type of deformity. When the mucosal stitching is complete, this graft can be externally molded, like plasticine, under the dorsal skin. In cases of mild-to-moderate nasal depression, septal and conchal cartilages are used in the same manner to augment the nasal dorsum with consistently effective and durable results. In cases with more severe defects of the nose, costal cartilage is necessary to correct both the length of the nose and the projection of the columella. In patients with recurrent deviation of the nasal bridge, this technique provided a simple solution to the problem. After overexcision of the dorsal part of deviated septal cartilage and insertion of Surgicel-wrapped diced cartilage, a straight nose was obtained in all patients with no recurrence (follow-up of 1 to 10 years). The technique also proved to be highly effective in primary rhinoplasties to camouflage bone irregularities after hump removal in patients with thin nasal skin and/or in cases when excessive hump removal was performed. As a complication, in six patients early postoperative swelling was more than usual. In 16 patients, overcorrection was persistent owing to fibrosis, and in 11 patients resorption was excessive beyond the expected amount. A histologic evaluation was possible in 16 patients, 3, 6, and 12 months postoperatively, by removing thin slices of excess cartilage from the dorsum of the nose during touch-up surgery. This graft showed a mosaic-type alignment of graft cartilage with fibrous tissue connection among the fragments. In conclusion, this type of graft is very easy to apply, because a plasticine-like material is obtained that can be molded with the fingers, giving a smooth surface with desirable form and long-lasting results in all cases. The favorable results obtained by this technique have led the authors to use Surgicel-wrapped diced cartilage routinely in all types of rhinoplasty.  相似文献   

4.
To achieve success in rhinoplasty, the plastic surgeon takes advantage of numerous intraoperative techniques designed to manipulate nasal soft tissue and the osseocartilaginous framework. Although the postoperative result may meet preoperative aesthetic goals, an element of nasal airway obstruction can persist from failure to acknowledge the role of inferior turbinates. Surgically responsive inferior turbinate hypertrophy is frequently not addressed secondary to inadequate history taking, incomplete physical examination, and/or surgeon reluctance to handle these sensitive structures.The goal of this article is to discuss the anatomy and physiology of the inferior turbinates, to present the role for inferior turbinate surgery during rhinoplasty, and to delineate the evolution of the current technique of submucosal resection of the inferior turbinates. Over the past 14 years, the senior author (R.J.R.) has performed inferior turbinates surgery on 648 patients as part of a rhinoplasty.  相似文献   

5.
Ventral hernia repair often includes the use of structural prosthetic materials, such as polypropylene mesh, that can induce dense abdominal adhesions to peritoneal structures. AlloDerm (LifeCell Corp., Branchburg, N.J.), a commercially available decellularized human dermal analogue with its native basement membrane components intact, is gradually revascularized and replaced with autologous tissue after implantation. The authors hypothesized that AlloDerm integrated with polypropylene mesh would reduce adhesions and provide a biodegradable scaffold to generate an autologous vascularized tissue layer separating the abdominal viscera from the mesh. Ventral hernia defects (3 x 1 cm) in 19 guinea pigs were repaired using an inlay technique with polypropylene mesh alone (n = 6) or with composite implants constructed by integrating polypropylene mesh and AlloDerm with its basement membrane surface oriented toward (polypropylene/AlloIn, n = 7) or away from (polypropylene/ AlloOut, n = 6) the peritoneal cavity. At 4 weeks, the authors determined the amount of mesh implant surface area covered by adhesions, the strength of the adhesions [graded from 0 (none) to 3], and the incidence of bowel adhesions. Histologic analyses were performed on full-thickness tissue sections from the repair sites. The mean surface areas affected by adhesions and mean adhesion strength were significantly lower in the polypropylene/AlloIn (area, 12.4 percent; mean grade, 1.0) and polypropylene/AlloOut (area, 9.5 percent; mean grade, 0.5) groups than in the polypropylene group (area, 79.5 percent; mean grade, 2.9); there were no such differences between the polypropylene/AlloIn and polypropylene/AlloOut groups. The bowel was adherent to 67 percent of polypropylene repairs and 0 percent of the composite mesh repairs. The AlloDerm was remodeled to form a vascularized tissue layer beneath the mesh in composite repairs, unlike the significantly thinner, dense scar layer that formed in the polypropylene repairs. Immunohistochemical labeling for factor VIII showed neovascularization throughout the AlloDerm.The AlloDerm thus functioned as a biodegradable tissue scaffold, guiding the formation of a thick, well-vascularized tissue layer separating the polypropylene mesh from intraperitoneal structures. This significantly reduced both the amount of surface area covered by adhesions and adhesion strength. Basement membrane orientation had no effect. Composite mesh implants composed of structural prosthetic materials integrated with AlloDerm may have useful clinical applications for abdominal wall reconstruction by reducing adhesions and providing a vascularized tissue layer to separate and protect the peritoneal structures from polypropylene mesh fibers.  相似文献   

6.
The skull-cap, the meninges, and the dorsal surface of the cerebral cortex were inspected in 20 Scottish Terriers subjected to euthanasia because of severe Scotty Cramp, and in 1 Cocker Spaniel and 2 Scottish Terrier puppies sacrificed because of Splay (inability to stand on the hind legs). Apparent abnormalities observed in the 12 younger (6 weeks to 18 months old) Scotty Cramp animals were firm medial adhesion of the dura to the skull-cap (all animals), meningeal hemorrhage (10 animals), and bony jags on the inner side of the skull-cap making impressions in the underlying dura and cerebral cortex (8 animals). Similar bony irregularities causing durai and cortical impressions were observed in 5 out of 8 Scotty Cramp dogs belonging to a senior age group (3 to 11 years old). Meningeal hemorrhage was observed only in 1 animal belonging to this group, but consistent observations were scarified appearance of the dura along the midline and induration around superior cerebral veins medially in the cruciate sulcus. Meningeal hemorrhage and firm medial adhesion of the dura to the skull-cap were consistent observations in the Splay puppies (6 weeks to 3 months old). The possibility is discussed that the ultimate cause of Scotty Cramp and Splay may be abnormalities in the development of the parietal and frontal bones, of their interconnection, and of their relation to the underlying meninges. This in turn may exert mechanical, circulatory or other influences causing dysfunction of the cerebral motor cortex.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Menick FJ 《Plastic and reconstructive surgery》2002,109(6):1839-55; discussion 1856-61
Because of its ideal color and texture, forehead skin is acknowledged as the best donor site with which to resurface the nose. However, all forehead flaps, regardless of their vascular pedicles, are thicker than normal nasal skin. Stiff and flat, they do not easily mold from a two-dimensional to a three-dimensional shape. Traditionally, the forehead is transferred in two stages. At the first stage, frontalis muscle and subcutaneous tissue are excised distally and the partially thinned flap is inset into the recipient site. At a second stage, 3 weeks later, the pedicle is divided. However, such soft-tissue "thinning" is limited, incomplete, and piecemeal. Flap necrosis and contour irregularities are especially common in smokers and in major nasal reconstructions. To overcome these problems, the technique of forehead flap transfer was modified. An extra operation was added between transfer and division.At the first stage, a full-thickness forehead flap is elevated with all its layers and is transposed without thinning except for the columellar inset. Primary cartilage grafts are placed if vascularized intranasal lining is present or restored. Importantly, at the first stage, skin grafts or a folded forehead flap can be used effectively for lining. A full-thickness skin graft will reliably survive when placed on a highly vascular bed. A full-thickness forehead flap can be folded to replace missing cover skin, with a distal extension, in continuity, to supply lining. At the second stage, 3 weeks later during an intermediate operation, the full-thickness forehead flap, now healed to its recipient bed, is physiologically delayed. Forehead skin with 3 to 4 mm of subcutaneous fat (nasal skin thickness) is elevated in the unscarred subcutaneous plane over the entire nasal inset, except for the columella. Skin grafts or folded flaps integrate into adjacent normal lining and can be completely separated from the overlying cover from which they were initially vascularized. If used, a folded forehead flap is incised free along the rim, completely separating the proximal cover flap from the distal lining extension. The underlying subcutaneous tissue, frontalis muscle, and any previously positioned cartilage grafts are now widely exposed, and excess soft tissue can be excised to carve an ideal subunit, rigid subsurface architecture. Previous primary cartilage grafts can be repositioned, sculpted, or augmented, if required. Delayed primary cartilage grafts can be placed to support lining created from a skin graft or a folded flap. The forehead cover skin (thin, supple, and conforming) is then replaced on the underlying rigid, recontoured, three-dimensional recipient bed. The pedicle is not transected. At a third stage, 3 weeks later (6 weeks after the initial transfer), the pedicle is divided.Over 10 years in 90 nasal reconstructions for partial and full-thickness defects, the three-stage forehead flap technique with an intermediate operation was used with primary and delayed primary grafts, and with intranasal lining flaps (n = 15), skin grafts (n = 11), folded forehead flaps (n = 3), turnover flaps (n = 5), prefabricated flaps (n = 4), and free flaps for lining (n = 2). Necrosis of the forehead flap did not occur. Late revisions were not required or were minor in partial defects. In full-thickness defects, a major revision and more than two minor revisions were performed in less than 5 percent of patients. Overall, the aesthetic results approached normal.The planned three-stage forehead flap technique of nasal repair with an intermediate operation (1) transfers subtle, conforming forehead skin of ideal thinness for cover, with little risk of necrosis; (2) uses primary and delayed primary grafts and permits modification of initial cartilage grafts to correct failures of design, malposition, or scar contraction before flap division; (3) creates an ideal, rigid subsurface framework of hard and soft tissue that is reflected through overlying skin and blends well into adjacent recipient tissues; (4) expands the application of lining techniques to include the use of skin grafts for lining at the first stage, or as a "salvage procedure" during the second stage, and also permits the aesthetic use of folded forehead flaps for lining; (5) ensures maximal blood supply and vascular safety to all nasal layers; (6) provides the surgeon with options to salvage reconstructive catastrophes; (7) improves the aesthetic result while decreasing the number and difficulty of revision operations and overall time for repair; and (8) emphasizes the interdependence of anatomy (cover, lining, and support) and provides insight into the nature of wound injury and repair in nasal reconstruction.  相似文献   

9.
Gruber RP  Pardun J  Wall S 《Plastic and reconstructive surgery》2003,112(4):1110-22; discussion 1123-4
A technique for autogenous grafting of the nasal dorsum with ear cartilage is suggested based on the results of 25 consecutive cases. The technique involves (1) harvesting the entire cymba conchae and cavum conchae of the ear; (2) separating them and suturing them to each other in tandem fashion; (3) filling the underside concavity of the cymba conchae part of the graft with scraps of cartilage; (4) avoiding any bruising or crushing of the graft; and (5) filling any minor residual irregularities of the dorsum with soft tissue or cartilage from the cephalic trim of the lateral crus. The results suggest a consistent augmentation of the nasal dorsum for deficiencies from 3 to 6 mm in size. Four of the 25 cases did require secondary correction for dorsal convexity, inadequate augmentation, and surface irregularities. The technique, however, has been helpful in that ear cartilage is invariably available, allowing septum to be used for more important grafts. The procedure is easily performed under local anesthesia with no significant distortion to the donor site.  相似文献   

10.
The deviated nose represents a complex cosmetic and functional problem. Septal surgery plays a central role in the successful management of the externally deviated nose. This study included 260 patients seeking rhinoplasty to correct external nasal deviations; 75 percent of them had various degrees of nasal obstruction. Septal surgery was necessary in 232 patients (89 percent), not only to improve breathing but also to achieve a straight, symmetrical, external nose as well. A graduated surgical approach was adopted to allow correction of the dorsal and caudal deviations of the nasal septum without weakening its structural support to the dorsum or nasal tip. The approach depended on full mobilization of deviated cartilage, followed by straightening of the cartilage and its fixation in the corrected position by using bony splinting grafts through an external rhinoplasty approach.  相似文献   

11.
R K Daniel 《Plastic and reconstructive surgery》1989,83(6):976-83; discussion 984
A new operative technique is described in which the natural curved nasal dorsum is retained in a modified fashion. Specifically, the nasal dorsum is elevated, the nasal height is reduced, and then the newly designed roof is lowered. Based on a minimum 1-year follow-up of 14 patients and a total experience of 28 patients, the procedure has the following advantages: (1) near normal anatomic structure is retained, (2) common secondary dorsal deformities are avoided, (3) the retained roof can function as a spreader graft, (4) the skin attachment with its attendant blood supply is preserved, and (5) the graft can be removed primarily or easily modified secondarily. Disadvantages appear to be the need for greater finesse and a limited follow-up of 2 years.  相似文献   

12.
Cartilage grafting has been used extensively to correct both the functional and aesthetic aspects of the nasal framework. The technique described by Erol ( 105: 2229, 2000) uses Surgicel-wrapped diced cartilage grafts in rhinoplasties. The advantages include its ease of preparation, the large volume of graft substrate available for use, and the avoidance of contour irregularities in the areas of placement. A retrospective case review of 67 consecutive patients who were treated with a Surgicel-wrapped diced cartilage graft as part of an aesthetic and/or functional rhinoplasty, in a 5-year period between 1995 and 2000, was performed in this study. All cases of congenital nasal deformities or deformities caused by trauma or tumors in which the technique was used were excluded. The charts were reviewed to determine demographic variables, the surgical procedures performed, prior operations, the rhinoplasty approach used, and the graft donor and recipient sites. Preoperative and postoperative photographs were examined, and the results were assessed. Data on the donor and recipient sites, complications, and the necessity for revisionary procedures were tabulated. There were two complications, namely, an infection, which resolved with aspiration and oral antibiotic therapy, and a recurrence of a dorsal depression, which necessitated repeated augmentation within 6 months. The technique of using Surgicel-wrapped diced cartilage proved to be effective for the augmentation of various areas of the nose. The complication and revision rates were acceptable and comparable to those of other techniques. Patient satisfaction with the aesthetic results was rated highly, with no reports of graft extrusion or contour irregularities. This technique is recommended for nasal augmentation and contouring for selected rhinoplasty patients.  相似文献   

13.
Schwarz RJ  Macdonald M 《Plastic and reconstructive surgery》2004,114(4):876-82; discussion 883-4
Destruction of the nasal septum and nasal bones by Mycobacterium leprae and subsequent infection is still seen regularly in leprosy endemic areas. The social stigma associated with this deformity is significant. Many different procedures have been developed to reconstruct the nose. Patients operated on at Anandaban Hospital and the Green Pastures Hospital and Rehabilitation Center between 1986 and 2001 were reviewed. There were 48 patients with an average age of 47 years. Five deformities were mild, 22 were moderate, 13 were severe, and eight were not graded. Bone grafting with nasolabial skin flaps was performed in 14 cases, bone grafting alone was performed in 10 cases, flaps alone were performed in seven cases, and cartilage grafting was performed in 10 cases. In three patients, a prosthesis was inserted, and in three patients a gull-wing forehead flap was performed. Overall, excellent or good cosmetic results were obtained in 83 percent of cases. Grafting with conchal cartilage was associated with the best cosmetic results and had minimal complications. Bone grafting with or without nasolabial flaps was associated with a 50 percent complication rate of infection or graft resorption. In mild to moderate deformities, cartilage grafting is recommended; for more severe deformities, bone grafting with bony fixation and skin flaps is recommended. Perioperative antibiotics must be used, and these procedures should be performed by an experienced surgeon. In very severe cases with skin deficiency, reconstruction with a forehead flap gives good results.  相似文献   

14.
The rostrum is a large diameter, thin-walled tubular structure that receives loads from the teeth. The rostrum can be conceptualized both as a rigid structure and as an assemblage of several bones that interface at sutures. Using miniature pigs, we measured in vivo strains in rostral bones and sutures to gain a better understanding of how the rostrum behaves biomechanically. Strains in the premaxillary and nasal bones were low but the adjacent maxillary-premaxillary, internasal, and intermaxillary suture strains were larger by an order of magnitude. While this finding emphasizes the composite nature of the rostrum, we also found evidence in the maxillary and nasal bones for rigid structural behavior. Namely, maxillary strain is consistent with a short beam model under shear deformation from molar loading. Strain in the nasal bones is only partially supported by a long beam model; rather, a complex pattern of dorsal bending of the rostrum from incisor contact and lateral compression is suggested. Torsion of the maxilla is ruled out due to the bilateral occlusion of pigs and the similar working and balancing side strains, although it may be important in mammals with a unilateral bite. Torsional loading does appear important in the premaxillae, which demonstrate working and balancing side changes in strain orientation. These differences are attributed to asymmetrical incisor contact occurring at the end of the power stroke.  相似文献   

15.
We describe our experience with autogenous septal cartilage onlay grafts for augmentation of the nasal dorsum in primary and secondary rhinoplasty cases. After careful nasofacial analysis, the grafts are custom-shaped into inverted-V-frame, A-frame, or inverted-U-frame grafts, depending on the type and degree of augmentation desired. The dorsal elevation is thus tailored to fit the imperfection at hand, resulting in a smooth, natural-looking nasal contour. The indications for each type of graft are reviewed, and the surgical technique of graft harvesting and carving is detailed and illustrated.  相似文献   

16.
Tasman AJ  Helbig M 《Plastic and reconstructive surgery》2000,105(7):2573-9; discussion 2580-2
The amorphous or wide nasal tip is the most commonly encountered nasal tip deformity, but little has been done to measure the effect of standard rhinoplasty techniques on nasal tip width. In the clinical routine, nasal tip width and soft-tissue cover thickness are estimated by inspection and palpation rather than by measurement. In this study, a B-mode sonograph with a 12-MHz transducer was used in a noncontact mode to measure tip width 0.5 cm occipital to the tip defining point, distance between the alar cartilage domes, and thickness of the soft-tissue cover overlying the lower lateral cartilages. These parameters were measured 3 to 8 weeks before and 56 days to 19 months after a transdomal suture tip plasty in 18 patients. The distance between the alar cartilage domes seemed to be an important factor for tip width because interdomal distance, not soft-tissue cover thickness, correlated with tip width before surgery (correlation: 0.53). Conversely, the degree of tip refinement correlated with preoperative soft-tissue cover thickness (correlation: 0.75), but not with interdomal distance. Ultrasonic imaging of nasal soft tissues may help to assess the effect of different tip refining procedures and other soft-tissue changes after rhinoplasty.  相似文献   

17.
Correction of intrinsic nasal tip asymmetries in primary rhinoplasty   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Rohrich RJ  Griffin JR 《Plastic and reconstructive surgery》2003,112(6):1699-712; discussion 713-5
  相似文献   

18.
The scleral ossicles, a ring of overlapping membrane bones, lie just outside the corneal margin in the eyes of domestic fowl. Eighty percent of the bony rings contain 14 bones; less than 1% have 13 bones; 19% have 15 bones; about 1% have 16 bones. Each bone is foreshadowed during development by a transient papilliform thickening in the overlying conjunctival epithelium. These conjunctival papillae appear on the eighth day of incubation and disappear on the twelfth day, when the corresponding preosseous membranes begin to ossify. Observations, and experiments involving the removal of specific papillae early or late in their maturation (in order to delete, or to reduce the size of, individual bones), demonstrated the following constraints on the morphogenesis of the scleral ossicular ring. (1) The number of ossicles is a function, not only of the number of papillae, but also of the distance between adjacent papillae; when two papillae lie close together, a single ossicle may arise beneath the pair. (2) There are three regions in the ring: nasal, dorsal (in both of which the bones overlap in one direction) and temporal (in which the bones overlap in the opposite direction). (3) The determinants of the direction of overlap between adjacent bones are extrinsic to the ossicles themselves and are distributed throughout each region, rather than confined to the discrete locations within each region where overlap normally occurs. (4) The three places in the ring where these regions meet are characterized by the loss (in 13-membered rings) or the addition (in 15- and 16-membered rings) of papillae and of their corresponding bones, and by transitions in the direction of overlap between the bones.  相似文献   

19.
There is a conception, likely a misconception, that when performing a nasal osteotomy with a concomitant dorsal hump removal, the upper lateral cartilages are detached or damaged and, over the long-term, respiratory difficulties result because of a middle vault collapse or interference with the internal nasal valve. A follow-up of 50 patients between 3 and 21 years postoperatively provides evidence that this can be prevented. The vast majority (82 percent) reported they were breathing very well for an average of 6.5 years postoperatively. Of the authors' own 38 primary rhinoplasty patients, only two patients (5 percent) reported respiratory difficulties. The authors are unable to substantiate that either the osteotomy or the dorsal hump removal was responsible. Of the 12 patients who had their primary rhinoplasty performed elsewhere, six (50 percent) reported respiratory difficulties before the secondary rhinoplasty at this clinic. Furthermore, an appreciable improvement in breathing was reported by 66.7 percent of these patients after the secondary rhinoplasty. The authors conclude that their gentle proper surgical technique, combined with a good understanding of nasal physiology (with respect to the septum, inferior turbinates, and external and internal valves), allows them to perform a concomitant dorsal hump removal and osteotomy without interfering with nasal physiology.  相似文献   

20.
A rare case of nasal clefting was presented to illustrate and emphasize the following points: The workup of nasal clefting should be complete to rule out associated deformities. Marked improvement may be noted with normal growth during the first few years of life. The surgical procedure employed a primary V-Y flap harvested from the central excess of nasal skin based on a very thin vascular area at the nasal columella. At this primary procedure, the flap was telescoped on itself to provide fullness in the nasal tip area. It was also split, and two transposition flaps were inset into the gap left behind by rotating the ala into normal position. The donor area of the V-Y flap provided easy access to the intercanthal area so that the excess skin on the bridge of the nose could be reduced. Two subsequent minor procedures were required for adjusting irregularities in the tip.  相似文献   

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