EMERGENCY

Initial Assessment and Evaluation of Traumatic Facial Injuries

Primary Survey in Maxillofacial Trauma

Airway Compromise

  • Importance: Ensuring airway patency is critical.
  • Intubation Requirement: Up to 42% of severe maxillofacial trauma patients.
  • Compromise Causes: Soiling (hemorrhage, emesis), obstruction (displaced tongue, soft tissue injury, swelling, foreign bodies like dislodged teeth).
  • Ventilation Difficulty: Distorted facial anatomy, especially with Le Fort II and III fractures.
  • Interventions:
    • Suction Catheters: Large-bore DuCanto catheters for soiled airways.
    • Advanced Intubation Methods: Suction Assisted Laryngoscopy and Airway Decontamination (SALAD).
    • Patient Positioning: Sitting up to maintain airway and prevent aspiration, if spinal precautions allow.
  • Spinal Precautions: Maintain cervical spinal precautions; incidence of associated cervical spine injury ranges from 0.3 to 24%.

Hemorrhage Control

  • Significance: Facial structures have increased vascularity; severe hemorrhage can cause shock.
  • Incidence: Up to 11% of maxillofacial trauma cases.
  • Common Causes: Midfacial fractures with bleeding from the maxillary artery and its branches.
  • Control Measures:
    • Direct pressure and early packing of nasal and oral cavities.
    • Nasal Packing: Use nasal tampons, Foley catheters, double lumen balloon catheters.
    • Severe Hemorrhage: May require arterial ligation or embolization.

Secondary Survey

Focused History

  • Screening Questions:
    • Vision issues (blurriness, double vision, floaters, flashes of light, photophobia, foreign body sensation, pain with eye movements).
    • Facial numbness.
    • Normal teeth alignment.
  • Medication Use: Ask about anticoagulants or platelet-inhibiting medications.

Inspection and Motor Function

  • Facial Inspection:
    • Views: “Bird’s eye view” from above, “worm’s eye view” from below.
    • Asymmetries: Look for subtle facial asymmetries.
  • Motor Function:
    • Facial nerve function: Close eyes tightly, raise eyebrows, purse lips, smile, frown.

Sensation, Palpation, and Stability

  • Sensory Assessment: Lightly touch forehead, lower eyelid, cheek, upper lip, chin.
  • Palpation: Assess for tenderness, step-offs, subcutaneous crepitus.
  • Facial Stability: Rock the hard palate while palpating the central face.

Ocular Examination

  • Visual Acuity: Check visual acuity and pupillary response.
  • Eye Injury Signs:
    • Teardrop-shaped pupils (open globe injury).
    • Exophthalmos, fixed dilated pupils, ophthalmoplegia (retrobulbar hemorrhage, orbital compartment syndrome).
    • Pain with extraocular movements (periorbital fracture).
    • Limited movements (extraocular muscle injury or entrapment).
    • Diplopia: Binocular (entrapment), monocular (lens dislocation, retinal detachment, foreign body).

Ears, Nose, and Oropharynx

  • Ears: Auricular hematoma, hemotympanum, CSF leak (basilar skull fracture).
  • Nose: Epistaxis, CSF leak, nasal lacerations, septal deviation, nasal septal hematomas.
  • Oropharyngeal Cavity: Malocclusion, missing/fractured teeth, oral mucosa breaks, sublingual hematomas, alveolar ridge fractures.
  • Tongue Blade Test: Screening for mandibular fractures.

Imaging

  • Facial CT: Gold standard for diagnosing facial fractures; high sensitivity, low cost.
  • Head and Cervical Spine CT: Due to the mechanism of injury.
  • CTA Imaging: Consider for penetrating trauma to the lateral face.

Management and Disposition of Certain Fracture Types

Orbital and Nasoorbitoethmoid Fractures

  • Orbit Anatomy: Four-walled structure with a posterior apex.
  • Fracture Types:
    • Pure (blowout) fractures: Involves internal orbit, typically maxillary sinus or ethmoid sinus.
    • Nasoorbitoethmoid fractures: Significant force to nasal bridge, often with lacrimal duct injuries, cribiform plate disruption, dural tears, TBI.
  • Management:
    • Consult facial surgery for all orbital fractures.
    • Urgent facial surgery and ophthalmology consultation for ocular involvement.
    • Emergent lateral canthotomy for retrobulbar hemorrhage.
    • Admission for nasoorbitoethmoid fractures.
    • Isolated blow-out fractures with normal eye exam: Discharge with facial surgery and ophthalmology follow-up.

Zygoma Fractures

  • Anatomy: Forms inferior and lateral borders of the orbit, attaches to maxillary, frontal, temporal bones.
  • Fracture Types:
    • Zygomatic arch fracture.
    • Tripartite, tripod, or zygomaticomaxillary fractures.
  • Management:
    • Isolated, minimally displaced fractures: Discharge with facial surgery follow-up.
    • Complex fractures: Facial surgery consultation, possible admission for repair, and IV antibiotics.

Nasal Fractures

  • Anatomy: Composed of bones and cartilaginous framework.
  • Management:
    • Closed, uncomplicated fractures: Reduce in ED if no swelling.
    • Associated septal hematoma: Drain, pack, antibiotics, ENT follow-up.
    • Open fractures: ENT consultation for repair and IV antibiotics.

Maxillary (Le Fort) Fractures

  • Classification:
    • Le Fort I: Transverse, separates maxilla from pterygoid plate and nasal septum (“floating palate”).
    • Le Fort II: Pyramidal, extends into orbital floor and rim.
    • Le Fort III: Craniofacial dysjunction, entire face mobility.
    • Le Fort IV: Includes frontal bone involvement.
  • Management:
    • Severe epistaxis and oropharyngeal hemorrhage: Airway protection, nasal/oral packing.
    • Early facial surgery consultation, neurosurgery for Le Fort IV.
    • Admission for most patients, IV antibiotics if open.

Mandible Fractures

  • Common Sites: Condyle, body, angle.
  • Management:
    • Open fractures: Facial surgery consultation, admission for IV antibiotics, operative repair.
    • Closed fractures: Discharge with facial surgery follow-up, Barton’s bandage, soft/liquid diet.

Common Antibiotics for Facial Fractures

ConditionAntibiotics
Open fracturesAmpicillin/sulbactam, penicillin G, clindamycin
Closed fractures with hematomaAmoxicillin-clavulanate, clindamycin

Sinus Precautions

  • Sneeze with mouth open.
  • No nose blowing.
  • No smoking.
  • Avoid using straws.
  • Avoid air travel.

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