Facial Fractures in Trauma Victims: The Influence of Treatment Delay on Ultimate Outcome

Abstract
To obtain objective data on the consequences of delayed treatment of facial fractures we reviewed the records of 220 patients who had suffered facial fractures concomitantly with extrafacial trauma severe enough in its own right to warrant hospital admission. Fractures studied were those of the mandible, maxilla, zygoma, and frontal sinus. Seventy-three patients fit inclusion criteria. Most injuries occurred in motor vehicle accidents. Associated extrafacial injuries were common and frequently multiple, the more serious of which generally took priority over the facial injuries in the triage system. The two most common reasons for delay were instability of the patient's neurological status, or initial non-recognition or poor definition of the facial fracture. Delays in treatment ranged from 0 to 24 days. In patients with mandible fracture only, delay of up to 24 days in definitive treatment led to no noticeable increase in morbidity due to malocclusion, infection, or nonunion. In no other facial fracture did treatment delay lead to an increased incidence of complications. Retrospective analysis of the patients who did suffer complications almost always revealed predisposing conditions that placed these patients at higher risk for poor results.

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