1. Pediatric Mandibular Fractures
- Author
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George C. Sotereanos, M. Nora Davison, Marc H. Hedrick, Steven P. Davison, and Matthew S. Clifton
- Subjects
Male ,Adolescent ,business.industry ,Mandibular fracture ,Hand technique ,Infant ,Dentistry ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Intermaxillary fixation ,Fracture Fixation, Internal ,stomatognathic diseases ,stomatognathic system ,Child, Preschool ,Mandibular Fractures ,Fracture fixation ,Humans ,Medicine ,Female ,Surgery ,Postoperative Period ,Child ,business ,Mixed dentition ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
The treatment of pediatric mandibular fractures is rare, controversial, and complicated by mixed dentition.To determine if open mandibular fracture repair with intraoral and extraoral rigid plate placement, after free hand occlusal and bone reduction, without intermaxillary fixation (IMF), is appropriate and to discuss postoperative advantages, namely, maximal early return of function and minimal oral hygiene issues.A group of 29 pediatric patients with a mandibular fracture were examined. Twenty pediatric patients (13 males and 7 females) with a mean age of 9 years (age range, 1-17 years) were treated using IMF. All patients were treated by the same surgeon (G.S.).Surgical time for plating was reduced by 1 hour, the average time to place patients in IMF. The patients who underwent open reduction internal fixation without IMF ate a soft mechanical diet by postoperative day 3 compared with postoperative day 16 for those who underwent IMF. Complication rates related to fixation technique were comparable at 20% for those who did not undergo IMF and 33% for those who did.We believe that free hand reduction is a valuable technique to reduce operative time for pediatric mandibular fractures. It maximizes return to function while minimizing the oral hygiene issues and hardware removal of intermaxillary function.
- Published
- 2001
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