1. Statistical Analysis of Surgical Dog-Ear Regression.
- Author
-
Kyung Suk Lee, Nam Gyun KIm, Pal Young Jang, Euy-Hoon Suh, Jun Sik Kim, Sang-Il Lee, Dawon Kang, Kzhwan Han, Daegu Son, Jun Hyung Kim, and Tae Hyun Choi
- Subjects
- *
PLASTIC surgery , *SURGERY , *STATISTICS , *REGRESSION analysis , *MEDICAL sciences , *SCARS , *WOMEN patients - Abstract
BACKGROUND Several methods have been developed to prevent or correct dog-ears. Most of these methods, however, result in prolonged scars and operative times. OBJECTIVE We observed dog-ears without correction to examine the regression of dog-ears with time. METHODS The study was performed on 43 cases of dog-ears in 26 patients. Linear regression analysis was performed to examine the correlation between various factors and the height of the dog-ears (%). We produced a regression equation to allow prediction of the height of the dog-ears (%). In addition, we estimated the initial height of the dog-ears that should be removed during surgery. RESULTS The height of dog-ears regressed with time, and this response was better in younger and female patients. It was predicted that the time taken for a dog-ear to reduce to 50% of its original height was 20.697 days; the median time at which dog-ears completely regressed was 132 days. The odds of regression of dog-ears with an initial height of ≤8 mm was 4.667 times greater than that of larger dog-ears. CONCLUSIONS If the height of a dog-ear is ≤8 mm, we recommend observation rather than immediate surgical removal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF