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Reconstruction of the anterior skull base with free muscle flap after iatrogenic injury

Publikace na Ústřední knihovna, 3. lékařská fakulta |
2018

Tento text není v aktuálním jazyce dostupný. Zobrazuje se verze "en".Abstrakt

We report on a 70-year-old patient who suffered from chronic osteomyelitis of the frontal bone following trauma. He underwent a common nasal polypectomy and shortly after the procedure, he developed nasal liquorrhea from the right nostril.

CT images showed a pneumocephalus and a defect in the right part of the ethmoidal bone (Fig. 1). First, the ear, nose and throat (ENT) surgeon indicated closure of the defect with a nasoseptal flap, which showed no effect.

A team consisting of a maxillar surgeon, neurosurgeon and ENT surgeon tried to close the defect of the rhinobasis using the pericranial flap for cranialization of the frontal sinus. After the procedure the liquorrhea stopped; however, 2 weeks after the operation the patient's state deteriorated.

He started to be septic with purulent meningitis. PET-CT showed no infectious focus, but repeated nasal endoscopy showed a purulent slime mass.

The smears from the rhinobasis and hemoculture examination confirmed the extended-spectrum beta-lactamase producing Klebsiella pneumonie and coagulase negative Staphylococcus. Repeated CT and MRI showed no intracranial infectious complication and good cranio-nasal separation.

However, the patient was septic, he developed a heavy psychoorganic syndrome and he needed vasopresor therapy with norepinephrine. After repeated nasal endoscopy and debridement, the defect in the rhinobasis reoccurred.

Therefore, a team of physicians came up with the last possible solution - closure of the rhinobasis defect with a free muscle flap.