Facial Trauma: Assessment - Face First Aid!
- Initial Approach: Follow ATLS principles (ABCDE). Prioritize airway, C-spine, breathing, circulation.
- Airway: Critical! Assess for obstruction (blood, foreign bodies, edema). Early intubation if GCS < 8, airway compromise, or expanding hematoma.
- Hemorrhage: Control active bleeding (direct pressure, packing). Consider angiography/embolization for persistent severe bleeding.
- Examination:
- Systematic: Inspect (asymmetry, lacerations, ecchymosis), palpate (tenderness, crepitus, step-offs).
- Neurological: GCS, cranial nerves (II, III, IV, V, VI, VII).
- Ocular: Visual acuity, EOMs, diplopia, RAPD, globe integrity.
- Imaging: CT scan (non-contrast, thin-slice axial/coronal, 3D reconstruction) is gold standard.
⭐ Most common site of CSF leak in facial trauma: Cribriform plate (anterior cranial fossa).
Mandibular Fractures - Jaw Breakers United
Most common facial #2 fracture. Often multiple.
- Common Sites: 📌 Mnemonic: "Can Angry Birds Sing Melody?"
- Condyle (30-35%)
- Angle (20-25%)
- Body (20-25%)
- Symphysis/Parasymphysis (15-20%)
- Ramus (<5%)
- Coronoid process (<2%)
- Classification:
- Simple/Compound/Comminuted.
- Favorable/Unfavorable (muscle pull impact).
- Clinical Signs:
- Pain, swelling, ecchymosis.
- Malocclusion (💡 most reliable).
- Trismus, step deformity.
- Lower lip anesthesia (IAN injury).
- Bleeding from ear (condylar #).
⭐ Muscle pull dictates displacement. Elevators (masseter, temporalis, med. pterygoid) pull superiorly/medially. Depressors (mylohyoid, geniohyoid, digastric) pull inferiorly/posteriorly. Lat. pterygoid pulls condyle anteromedially.
- Management:
- Airway first.
- Closed (MMF) or Open Reduction Internal Fixation (ORIF).
Midface Fractures - Central Face Carnage
- Le Fort Fractures: Classification of complex maxillary injuries.
- 📌 Mnemonic: I = Palate floats; II = Maxilla floats (pyramidal); III = Face floats (craniofacial dysjunction).
- Le Fort I (Transverse): Horizontal; palate separation, mobile palate, malocclusion.
- Le Fort II (Pyramidal): Maxilla & nasal bones separation; mobile midface, infraorbital paresthesia, CSF rhinorrhea possible.
- Le Fort III (Craniofacial Dysjunction): Midface-cranial base separation; gross edema, 'Dish face' deformity, CSF rhinorrhea, airway compromise.
⭐ > 'Dish face' deformity is characteristic of Le Fort III fractures.

- Clinical Differentiation (Le Fort Types):
- Zygomaticomaxillary Complex (ZMC) Fracture (Tripod/Tetrapod):
- Involves: Frontozygomatic suture, zygomatic arch, infraorbital rim, zygomaticomaxillary buttress.
- Signs: Cheek flattening, diplopia, trismus, subconjunctival hemorrhage, infraorbital anesthesia.
fracture components diagram)
- Naso-Orbital-Ethmoid (NOE) Fracture:
- Signs: Traumatic telecanthus (intercanthal distance > 35mm), flattened nasal dorsum, epiphora.
- Crucial: Medial canthal tendon (MCT) integrity (Markowitz classification).
Orbito-Frontal Fractures - Eye & Brow Blows
- Orbital Fractures: Predominantly blowout or tripod types.
- Blowout Fracture: Most common; inferior wall (floor) > medial wall.
- Mechanism: Direct globe trauma → ↑intraorbital pressure.
- Signs: Diplopia (esp. upgaze), enophthalmos, infraorbital nerve anesthesia (cheek/lip numbness), restricted eye movements (muscle entrapment), periorbital ecchymosis. "Teardrop sign" on CT.

- Tripod (Zygomaticomaxillary Complex - ZMC) Fracture: Involves zygomatic arch, lateral orbital wall, inferior orbital rim, and zygomaticomaxillary buttress.
- Signs: Malar flattening, palpable step-offs, trismus, diplopia.
- Blowout Fracture: Most common; inferior wall (floor) > medial wall.
- Frontal Sinus Fractures: Classified by anterior table, posterior table, or combined involvement; nasofrontal outflow tract (NFOT) status is key.
- Anterior table: Primarily cosmetic (forehead depression).
- Posterior table: ↑Risk of CSF leak, meningitis, intracranial injury.
- NFOT injury: ↑Risk of mucocele/mucopyocele.

- Management: Varies by displacement, table involvement, NFOT patency, and presence of CSF leak (observation, ORIF, obliteration, cranialization).
⭐ Critical signs indicating urgent surgical intervention for orbital fractures include: persistent diplopia in primary gaze, non-resolving oculocardiac reflex (bradycardia, nausea), "white-eyed blowout" (pediatric entrapment with minimal external signs), and significant enophthalmos (>2 mm).
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Le Fort fractures: I (floating palate), II (pyramidal), III (craniofacial dysjunction); assess maxillary mobility.
- Nasal bone fractures: Most common; closed reduction within 5-7 days for best results.
- Orbital blowout fractures: Cause diplopia, enophthalmos, infraorbital anesthesia; "teardrop" sign on CT.
- Mandibular fractures: Common at condyle/angle; malocclusion is a key diagnostic sign.
- ZMC fractures (tripod): Result in cheek flattening, trismus; assess ocular motility.
- CSF rhinorrhea with skull base fractures: Confirm using β2-transferrin test.
- Airway management is the top priority in severe facial trauma.
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