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(Barré) #1

HEAD, EYE, EAR, NOSE, AND THROAT


EMERGENCIES

SYMPTOMS/EXAM
■ Malocclusion with an anterior open bite
■ Pain, inability to close jaw, difficulty speaking

TREATMENT
■ Reduce dislocation in a C-shaped maneuver (downward pressure on the
back of the third molars and slight upward pressure on the symphysis of
the mandible) (see Figure 14.12).
■ Postreduction X-ray is used to rule out fracture and verify reduction.

Zygomatico-Maxillary-Orbital Complex Fracture

Tripod fractures are fractures of the zygoma (also known as cheek bone or
malar bone). The fracture results from a direct blow to the zygoma (MVC or
assault). The term tripod refers to the three fracture sites: (1) the zygomatic-
frontal suture, (2) connection to the inferior orbit floor and rim, and (3) the
zygomatic-temporal suture (zygomatic arch). See Figure 14.13.

SYMPTOMS/EXAM
■ Facial flattening and asymmetry
■ Paresthesia of cheek due to injury to the maxillary branch of the trigemi-
nal nerve (CN V)
■ Periorbital emphysema
■ Trismus or difficulty opening and closing jaw may occur due to entrapment
of the coronoid process of the mandible under a depressed zygomatic arch.
■ Diplopia in setting of concurrent orbital blowout fracture

FIGURE 14.12. Reduce a dislocated mandible by pushing inferiorly and posteriorly.

(Reproduced, with permission, from Tintinalli JE, Kelen GD, Stapczynski SJ. Emergency
Medicine: A Comprehensive Study Guide, 6th ed.New York: McGraw-Hill, 2004:1476.)
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