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Technical note| Volume 58, ISSUE 1, P118-119, January 2020

Posting a pericranial flap through a “letterbox” into the frontal bone to reconstruct an anterior cranial defect: a new approach

Published:November 09, 2019DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bjoms.2019.10.304
      The most complex and controversial area in head and neck reconstructive surgery is the management of tumours of the maxilla, midface, and skull base.
      • Brown J.S.
      • Shaw R.J.
      Reconstruction of the maxilla and midface: introducing a new classification.
      Patients who develop a tumour in the orbital roof or from the nasal cavity usually develop a large defect that can extend into the anterior cranial fossa. This makes prosthodontic reconstruction with a facial prosthesis in this region challenging.

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      References

        • Brown J.S.
        • Shaw R.J.
        Reconstruction of the maxilla and midface: introducing a new classification.
        Lancet Oncol. 2010; 11: 1001-1008
        • Zanation A.M.
        • Synderman C.H.
        • Carrau R.L.
        • et al.
        Minimally invasive endoscopic pericranial flap: a new method for endonasal skull base reconstruction.
        Laryngoscope. 2009; 119: 13-18