2000
DOI: 10.3171/foc.2000.9.1.2
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Surgical treatment of complex traumatic frontobasal lesions: personal experience in 74 patients

Abstract: Object The author's personal series included 148 patients who sustained traumatic frontobasal injuries and were treated between 1986 and 1999. Included in this study are 74 of 148 patients with acute injuries and complex fronto-basal lesions involving the frontal sinus, the cribriform/ethmoid roof complex, one or both orbital roofs, and the planum sphenoidale. Methods Surgery was delayed for up to 4 week… Show more

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Cited by 21 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…Reports suggest that CSF leaks occur in approximately 2% of all head injuries and in about 5% to 12% of basal skull fractures (58,114,166). According to Brodie and Thompson, as well as Friedman et al, CSF fistulas are most commonly associated with fontal sinus fractures, followed by orbital and petrous bone fractures (21,58).…”
Section: Acquired Anatomical Defectsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Reports suggest that CSF leaks occur in approximately 2% of all head injuries and in about 5% to 12% of basal skull fractures (58,114,166). According to Brodie and Thompson, as well as Friedman et al, CSF fistulas are most commonly associated with fontal sinus fractures, followed by orbital and petrous bone fractures (21,58).…”
Section: Acquired Anatomical Defectsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Reports suggest that CSF leaks occur in approximately 2% of all head injuries and in about 5% to 12% of basal skull fractures [12][13][14]. Defects of anterior skull base are prone to give rise to CSF leak due to tightly adherent dura to the skull base and are particularly common following trauma that can either be accidental or iatrogenic.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…However, extensive fractures of the anterior skull base, the " rhinobase " [47] , as in the present case require a bifrontal intradural approach as they are almost always accompanied by extensive dural tearing and cerebral injury. Based on our personal experience of 74 cases of such complex traumatic lesions to the anterior skull base [37] we chose this approach and used vital material to close the skull base defect. Debridement of the cranial wound in order to remove potentially retained foreign bodies is also essential [10,20] to prevent infections.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%