Craniofacial surgery in children: concepts and questions.

Clinics in plastic surgery 1977 Vol.4(4) p. 571-86

Edgerton MT, Futrell JW

Abstract

Craniofacial surgery is an exciting new subspecialty of medicine. It is strictly a team project that will function well only in a tertiary medical center. Particular coordination is needed among the plastic surgeon, neurosurgeon, anesthesiologist, and pediatrician. This article considers many of the potential advantages and some of the disadvantages of performing craniofacial surgery on infants. It is difficult or impossible, based on current knowledge, to predict the ultimate limits of such new techniques. The history of surgical evolution, however, continues to demonstrate that what "at first observation" was thought to be impossible or undesirable often evolves, with more understanding, to be the desired course of action. It was entirely appropriate that the initial craniofacial surgical efforts be generally confined to adult-type patients, but the currently available technical refinements have developed such procedures to the point where they now have a definite place in infant surgery as well. Continued clinical investigative research will provide further information regarding the eventual benefits and perhaps will lead to surgical techniques in neonates that will actually prevent the development of certain predictable deformities.

추출된 의학 개체 (NER)

유형영어 표현한국어 / 풀이UMLS CUI출처등장
해부 craniofacial scispacy 1
질환 adult-type patients scispacy 1
기타 children scispacy 1
기타 neonates scispacy 1

MeSH Terms

Bone Diseases, Developmental; Bone Transplantation; Child; Craniofacial Dysostosis; Face; Family; Humans; Hypertelorism; Infant; Malocclusion; Skull; Surgery, Plastic; Time Factors; Transplantation, Autologous