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小儿面部骨折

Pediatric Facial Fractures

作者信息

Rogan Daniel T., Hohman Marc H., Ahmed Abraham

机构信息

Children's Hospital of Orange County

Uniformed Services University/Madigan Army Medical Center

Abstract

Trauma is a significant cause of morbidity and mortality in the pediatric population. The head is the most common site of trauma. Facial fractures in very young children are rare due to their greater facial elastic cartilage content and cranial-to-facial volume ratio than adults. While facial fractures are infrequent in this age group, these injuries can be severe enough to produce lifelong consequences. Facial growth dictates age-specific fracture patterns different from adults mainly due to secondary dentition eruption and paranasal sinus pneumatization. Isolated facial fractures can occur in pediatric patients. However, the potential for concurrent injuries must be considered in the setting of acute trauma, particularly in the head, eyes, brain, neck, and airway. The bones forming the facial framework include the paired maxillae, mandibles, zygomae, and nasal and frontal bones. The maxilla forms part of the cheek and the upper jaw and its tooth sockets. The mandible forms the lower jaw and is the only movable bone in the skull. The zygoma contributes to the cheeks' prominence and supports the orbit. The nasal bones form the nose's bridge and are susceptible to fractures due to their relative thinness. The frontal bone comprises the forehead and upper part of the orbit, protecting the brain from the anterior side. Cranial bones protecting the rest of the brain include the parietal bones superolaterally, temporal bones laterally, occipital bones posteriorly, and the sphenoid and ethmoids inferiorly. The neonatal skull is much larger than the face, with an 8:1 volume ratio compared to adults' 2:1 proportions. The forehead protrudes over the face more in infants than adults. With growth, the face expands to comprise a greater relative area of the head until adult proportions are reached in the teenage years. Thus, head trauma in young children is more likely to affect the skull than the face. Pediatric facial bones have more elastic cartilage than adult bones, making them resilient and more likely to compress than fracture after traumatic impact. Consequently, children develop fewer facial fractures from mechanisms that can easily break adult bones. If they occur, pediatric facial fractures tend to be minimally displaced and do not assume the classic adult fracture patterns, such as Le Fort injuries. Nasal fractures are the most common facial fractures in children overall due to the nasal bridge's prominence and minimal surrounding structural support. Mandible fractures are the 2nd most common, accounting for nearly half of pediatric facial fractures. Fracture location relates to the sinus' age-dependent development and, to a lesser degree, the dentition stage. During development, facial bones thicken before becoming fully pneumatized and thinning into the final adult configuration. Active growth and early pneumatization make children's facial bones thicker and more resistant to fractures than more developed, thin adult bones. Maxillary sinus pneumatization occurs at birth but may continue until around age 7. Thus, the midface at this time is thicker and more elastic than the upper face. Blunt trauma to the midface in this age group often transmits impact forces superiorly toward the thinner frontal bone, increasing the likelihood of orbital roof fractures, which are less frequent in older children. Mixed dentition forms and progresses in the midface between ages 6 and 12, adding further stability and strength to the region while maxillary pneumatization slows. However, orbital floor thinning during this period makes orbital floor and wall injuries, including blowout fractures, more common with increasing age in this group. Beyond age 12, the maxillary sinuses become fully pneumatized, midfacial bones thin, cartilages ossify, and frontal sinuses continue to thicken and develop. Mid- or upper-face blunt trauma transmits impact forces downward, away from the thick, elastic frontal sinus toward the thin, adult-like upper maxilla. Hence, orbital floor fractures are more prevalent in adolescents than younger children.

摘要

创伤是儿科人群发病和死亡的重要原因。头部是最常见的创伤部位。由于幼儿面部弹性软骨含量和颅面体积比高于成人,幼儿面部骨折很少见。虽然该年龄组面部骨折不常见,但这些损伤可能严重到足以产生终身后果。面部生长决定了与成人不同的特定年龄骨折模式,主要是由于恒牙萌出和鼻窦气化。小儿患者可发生孤立性面部骨折。然而,在急性创伤情况下,必须考虑并发损伤的可能性,特别是在头部、眼睛、大脑、颈部和气道。构成面部框架的骨骼包括成对的上颌骨、下颌骨、颧骨、鼻骨和额骨。上颌骨构成脸颊、上颌及其牙槽的一部分。下颌骨构成下颌,是颅骨中唯一可活动的骨头。颧骨有助于脸颊突出并支撑眼眶。鼻骨构成鼻梁,由于相对较薄,容易骨折。额骨包括额头和眼眶上部,从前面保护大脑。保护大脑其余部分的颅骨包括上方外侧的顶骨、外侧的颞骨、后方的枕骨以及下方的蝶骨和筛骨。新生儿颅骨比面部大得多,体积比为8:1,而成人的比例为2:1。婴儿的额头比成人更突出于面部。随着生长,面部不断扩大,在头部所占的相对面积越来越大,直到青少年时期达到成人比例。因此,幼儿头部创伤比面部创伤更容易影响颅骨。小儿面部骨骼比成人骨骼含有更多的弹性软骨,使其具有弹性,在外伤撞击后更易压缩而非骨折。因此,儿童因那些容易使成人骨骼骨折的机制而发生的面部骨折较少。如果发生骨折,小儿面部骨折往往移位极小,不会呈现典型的成人骨折模式,如Le Fort损伤。鼻骨折是儿童最常见的面部骨折,因为鼻梁突出且周围结构支撑较少。下颌骨骨折是第二常见的骨折,占小儿面部骨折的近一半。骨折部位与鼻窦的年龄依赖性发育有关,在较小程度上也与牙列阶段有关。在发育过程中,面部骨骼在完全气化并变薄成为最终成人形态之前会增厚。活跃的生长和早期气化使儿童面部骨骼比发育更成熟、更薄的成人骨骼更厚且更抗骨折。上颌窦气化在出生时就开始,但可能会持续到7岁左右。因此,此时的中面部比上面部更厚且更有弹性。该年龄组中面部受到钝性创伤时,冲击力通常向上传递至较薄的额骨,增加了眶顶骨折的可能性,而这种骨折在大龄儿童中较少见。混合牙列在6至12岁期间在中面部形成并发展,在减缓上颌气化的同时,为该区域增加了进一步的稳定性和强度。然而,在此期间眶底变薄,使得眶底和眶壁损伤,包括爆裂性骨折,在该组中随着年龄增长而更常见。12岁以后,上颌窦完全气化,中面部骨骼变薄,软骨骨化,额窦继续增厚并发育。中面部或上面部钝性创伤会使冲击力向下传递,从厚而有弹性的额窦传递至薄的、类似成人的上颌骨上部。因此,眶底骨折在青少年中比年幼儿童更普遍。

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