Maxillofacial trauma
Background
Prehospital Care
- Assess patients ability to speak and protect the airway before and frequently during transport
- Hematomas can significantly distort pharyngeal and facial anatomy making intubation or cricothyroidotomy difficult
- Increased jaw mobility from a mid face fracture may help with intubation
- Penetrating trauma to the lower third of the face frequently requires intubation or a surgical airway[1]
- Place a protective shield over an eye suspected to have a ruptured globe
- Patients should remain upright or reverse trendelenburg if there is oropharyngeal and nasal bleeding to avoid aspiration especially if placed in cervical protection
- Temporizing hemostasis with oral and nasal packing in an intubated patient may help with persistent bleeding
- Transport all avulsed pieces of the face including ears and nose
Pediatric Considerations
- Cricothyrotomy is contraindicated in patients <8yr old
- Maxillary sinuses do not develop until 6 yr old (reduces midfacial fracture)
- Pediatric orbital floor is more pliable, more likely to lead to entrapment
- Mandible fracture requires prompt referral (1-2d) due to rapid bone remodeling
Clinical Features
[[File:PMC2700599 JETS-02-89-g005.png|thumb|Patient with poly maxillofacial trauma: (a) Bilateral black eyes. (b) X-ray skull: AP view of the same patient showing multiple fractures of facial bone including mandible. (c) X-ray skull: lateral view of the same patient showing multiple fractures of facial bone including mandible. (d) CT scan of the same patient showing details of facial bone fractures. Patient was treated surgically and internal fixation of bone fragments was performed
Ears
- Auricular Hematoma
- Signs of basilar skull fracture
- CSF leak
- Hemotympanum
- Battle Sign
Nose
- Crepitus over any facial sinus suggests sinus fracture
- Septal Hematoma
- Make sure simple nasal fracture isn't a complex naso-orbito-ethmoid injury
Oral
- Intraoral palpation of zygomatic arch to distinguish bony from soft tissue injury
- Mandible Fracture
- Place finger in auditory canal while patient opens and closes jaw to detect condyle fracture
- Tongue blade test
- 95% Sn for no fracture if can bite down hard enough to break it when twisted by examiner
- Jaw deviation due to mandible dislocation or condyle fracture
- Chin will point away from dislocation, towards a fracture
- Malocclusion occurs in mandible, zygomatic, and Le Fort fractures
- Lacerations and mucosal ecchymosis suggests mandible fracture
Other Face
- Numbness
- Check supraorbital, infraorbital, and mental nerves
- Assess Le Fort by rocking hard palate with one hand while stabilizing forehead with other
Eye
- See Orbital trauma
Visual Diagnosis
Differential Diagnosis
Maxillofacial Trauma
- Ears
- Nose
- Oral
- Other face
- Zygomatic arch fracture
- Zygomaticomaxillary (tripod) fracture
- Related
Evaluation
Workup
- Suspect midface fracture > facial CT
- Suspect orbital floor fracture > orbital CT
- Suspect mandibular fracture > CT face
Diagnosis
- Frequently on CT
Example Images
Le Fort type 1 fracture
Management
- Treat underlying process/diagnosis
Disposition
- Bedside consult is necessary for:
- Decreased vision
- Tripod Fracture
- Le Fort Fracture
- Open Mandibular Fracture
- Frontal Sinus Fractures with intracranial involvement
See Also
References
- ↑ Hollier L. et al. Facial gunshot wounds: A 4-year experience. Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery. 2011: 59:277-282

