ABSTRACT
SUMMARY: The ability of our resident selection process to identify individuals who will ultimately become competent plastic surgeons is crucial to the specialty's future. Current criteria in use are not productive of that outcome. The presence of emotional intelligence and the element of grit have been incorporated in business and the military as factors to be evaluated in potential candidates. Plastic surgery should initiate an investigation of inclusion of a similar assessment of resident applicants.
Subject(s)
Character , Emotional Intelligence , Internship and Residency , Personnel Selection/methods , Surgery, Plastic/education , Clinical Competence , Humans , Surgeons/education , Surgeons/psychologyABSTRACT
Edwardsiella tarda (ET), a Gram-negative bacterium, causes an extremely uncommon, yet highly aggressive, soft tissue infection. Although plastic surgeons are frequently involved in the primary care, debridement, and secondary reconstruction of difficult soft tissue infections, infections caused by ET have received scant attention in the plastic surgery literature, perhaps because of the rarity of occurrence. We present a case of a 58-year-old man with alcohol abuse and hepatitis C who developed an upper extremity soft tissue infection after a catfish injury, which rapidly deteriorated to cause multiorgan failure and death within 5 days of admission. We will discuss the management of this rare but potentially lethal infection as well as the review of the current literature.
Subject(s)
Biomedical Research , Publications , Surgery, Plastic , Conflict of Interest , DisclosureABSTRACT
Reconstruction of substantial-sized upper lip defects may require an Abbe flap reconstruction to avoid excessive tightness and deformity. The design of the Abbe or lip switch flap harvested from the lower lip is important for a satisfactory aesthetic and functional result. Harvest of the flap is performed to enable a definitive inset into the defect. The video that accompanies this article depicts rotation of an Abbe flap into a philtral defect created by basal cell carcinoma excision.
Subject(s)
Carcinoma, Basal Cell/surgery , Lip Neoplasms/surgery , Lip/surgery , Mohs Surgery/adverse effects , Plastic Surgery Procedures/methods , Carcinoma, Basal Cell/pathology , Female , Humans , Lip/pathology , Lip Neoplasms/pathology , Middle Aged , Surgical Flaps/transplantation , Treatment OutcomeABSTRACT
Frontal sinus fractures are relatively rare maxillofacial injuries (only 5-15% of all facial fractures). The appropriate management of frontal sinus fracture and associated pathology is controversial. Diagnosis and treatment of frontal sinus fractures has improved with the advances of high-resolution computed tomography technology. Treatment of frontal sinus fractures depends on several factors, including contour deformity of anterior table; the presence of CSF leak or air-fluid level in the sinus, likelihood of nasofrontal duct obstruction, and degree of displacement of posterior table. Nasofrontal duct patency should be checked if fracture pattern is highly suspicious of ductal injury. Cranialization is performed in cases of severely comminuted posterior wall fracture. Long-term complication of frontal sinus fracture can occur up to 10 years after initial injury or intervention; so, judicious long-term follow-up is warranted. This article presents the management and complications of frontal sinus fractures.
ABSTRACT
Acquisition of a secure airway is an essential element of the operative management of maxillofacial trauma. Of the options available, submental intubation is an alternative to tracheostomy. The access should be accomplished via a midline approach rather than lateral through the mylohyoid, an armored endotracheal tube utilized to prevent kinking, and the passage facilitated by use of wound dilators obtained from a percutaneous tracheostomy set.