Craniofacial Surgery Principles - Skull Sculpting
- Goal: Reshape cranial vault; restore form, volume, function (e.g., ↓ICP).
- Key Indications:
- Craniosynostosis: Premature suture fusion.
- Sagittal (Scaphocephaly): Most common; elongated skull.
- Coronal (Brachycephaly/Anterior Plagiocephaly): Flattened/asymmetric forehead.
- Metopic (Trigonocephaly): Triangular forehead.
- Lambdoid (Posterior Plagiocephaly): Rare; differentiate from deformational.
- Cranial defects (trauma, tumor).
- Syndromic craniosynostosis (e.g., Apert, Crouzon, Pfeiffer).
- Craniosynostosis: Premature suture fusion.
- Optimal Timing (Synostosis): 6-12 months (utilizes brain growth).
- Core Techniques:
- Osteotomies & Remodeling: Fronto-orbital advancement (FOA), pi-plasty, barrel-stave.
- Bone Grafts: Autologous (calvarial preferred) or alloplastic.
- Distraction Osteogenesis: For significant advancements.
- Endoscopic Strip Craniectomy & Helmeting: Minimally invasive; select cases (sagittal, <6 months).
- Complications: CSF leak, infection, blood loss, dural tear, relapse.
⭐ Virchow's Law: Bone growth is restricted perpendicular to a fused suture, leading to compensatory overgrowth at open sutures.

Craniofacial Surgery Principles - Syndrome Spotlight
- Apert Syndrome: FGFR2 gene. Bicoronal synostosis, midface hypoplasia, syndactyly ("mitten hands", "sock feet").
- Crouzon Syndrome: FGFR2 gene. Craniosynostosis (often bicoronal), exorbitism, maxillary hypoplasia. Normal limbs and intellect.
- Treacher Collins Syndrome (Mandibulofacial Dysostosis): TCOF1 gene. Malar & mandibular hypoplasia, down-slanting palpebral fissures, lower lid coloboma, ear anomalies (e.g., microtia).
- Pierre Robin Sequence: Triad of micrognathia, glossoptosis, airway obstruction. U-shaped cleft palate common.
- Pfeiffer Syndrome: FGFR1/FGFR2 genes. Craniosynostosis, broad thumbs & great toes, variable syndactyly.
- Goldenhar Syndrome (Oculo-Auriculo-Vertebral Spectrum): Asymmetric. Hemifacial microsomia, epibulbar dermoids, ear tags/microtia, vertebral anomalies.

⭐ Crouzon syndrome typically presents with craniosynostosis and midface hypoplasia but, unlike Apert syndrome, usually has normal intelligence and no limb abnormalities (hands/feet).
Craniofacial Surgery Principles - Repair Roadmap
- Goal: Restore form & function; minimize morbidity.
- Timing: Balance growth, psychosocial factors, & surgical ease.
- Early (3-12 months): Craniosynostosis, some clefts.
- Later (4-18 years): Orthognathic, complex reconstructions.
- Hierarchy of Reconstruction (Ladder/Elevator):
- Direct closure
- Skin grafts (split/full-thickness)
- Local flaps
- Regional flaps
- Distant flaps (pedicled/free)
- Tissue expansion
- Alloplastic implants
- Vascularized Composite Allotransplantation (VCA)

⭐ Pierre Robin Sequence Triad: Micrognathia, Glossoptosis, Airway obstruction. Management often involves prone positioning or surgical airway/tongue-lip adhesion. 📌 MGA (Micrognathia, Glossoptosis, Airway obstruction).
Craniofacial Surgery Principles - Fix & Function
- Goal: Restore skeletal stability (Fix) & physiological processes (Function: airway, mastication, speech).
- Fixation (RIF - Rigid Internal Fixation):
- Plates & screws (titanium, resorbable); achieve anatomical reduction.
- Load-sharing: Bone + plate share load (stable fractures).
- Load-bearing: Plate bears full load (unstable/comminuted fractures, defects).
- Aim: Primary bone healing, minimizes need for external fixation.
- Screws: Monocortical, bicortical; lag screws for interfragmentary compression.
- Function:
- Occlusion: Paramount for jaw surgery (maxilla/mandible).
- TMJ integrity & pain-free movement.
- Nerve preservation (e.g., CN VII, V3-inferior alveolar nerve).

⭐ Champy's lines of ideal osteosynthesis dictate plate placement along lines of tension in the mandible, crucial for functional stability after fracture or osteotomy.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Le Fort fractures (I, II, III) classify midface trauma; Le Fort II is pyramidal, Le Fort III involves craniofacial disjunction.
- Craniosynostosis: premature cranial suture fusion; scaphocephaly (sagittal suture) is most common.
- Key craniosynostosis syndromes: Apert (syndactyly) and Crouzon (proptosis, normal limbs).
- Distraction osteogenesis: principle of gradual bone lengthening by controlled traction on a surgically created fracture.
- Orbital floor blowout fractures: risk diplopia, enophthalmos, and infraorbital nerve paresthesia.
- Treacher Collins syndrome: mandibulofacial dysostosis with malar and mandibular hypoplasia, down-slanting palpebral fissures.
- Pierre Robin Sequence: characterized by micrognathia, glossoptosis, and airway obstruction; often associated with cleft palate.
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