Division of Emergency Radiology, Department of Radiology, Stony Brook University Renaissance School of Medicine, Stony Brook University Hospital, 101 Nicolls Road, Stony Brook, NY 11794, USA.
Division of Emergency Radiology, Department of Radiology, New York University Langone Health, Bellevue Hospital and Trauma Center, 550 First Avenue, New York, NY 10016, USA.
Clin Imaging. 2023 Sep;101:167-179. doi: 10.1016/j.clinimag.2023.06.015. Epub 2023 Jun 25.
Given the demands of a busy high-volume trauma center, trauma radiologists are expected to evaluate an enormous number of images covering a multitude of facial bones in a short period of time in severely traumatized patients. Therefore, a comprehensive checklist, search pattern, and practical approach become indispensable for evaluation. Moreover, fracture complex classification conveys abundant information in a succinct shorthand fashion, which can be a large asset in a busy high-volume trauma center: reliably helping clinicians communicate urgent findings, make early treatment decisions, and effectively plan surgical approaches. Traditionally, radiologists' approach the CT axial dataset in top-down fashion: navigating their descent craniocaudal. However, a bottom-up approach may be advantageous, especially when it comes to facial fracture complex classification. Four key anatomic landmarks of the face, when evaluated sequentially in bottom-up fashion, are favorable to rapid single-sweep facial fracture characterization: the mandible, the pterygoid plates, the zygoma, and the bony orbits. That is, when done in succession: 1. Clearing the mandible rules out a panfacial smash fracture. 2. Clearing the pterygoid plates effectively rules out a Le Fort I, II, and III fracture. 3. Clearing the zygoma effectively rules out a zygomaticomaxillary complex (ZMC) type fracture. 4. Clearing the bony orbits effectively rules out a naso-orbital-ethmoid (NOE) fracture. Following this process of exclusion and elimination; as one ascends through the face, fracture characterization becomes more manageable and straightforward. Besides identifying all of the fractures and using the appropriate classification system, the radiologist also needs to recognize key clinically relevant soft tissue injuries that may be associated with facial fractures and thus should address these in the report.
鉴于繁忙的大容量创伤中心的需求,创伤放射科医生需要在短时间内评估大量覆盖多种面部骨骼的图像,这些患者都遭受了严重创伤。因此,全面的清单、搜索模式和实用方法对于评估变得不可或缺。此外,骨折复杂分类以简洁的方式传达了丰富的信息,这在繁忙的大容量创伤中心中可以成为一个很大的优势:可靠地帮助临床医生传达紧急发现,做出早期治疗决策,并有效地规划手术方法。传统上,放射科医生以自上而下的方式处理 CT 轴向数据集:沿着从头至尾的方向下降。然而,自下而上的方法可能是有利的,尤其是在面部骨折复杂分类方面。面部的四个关键解剖学标志,以自下而上的方式依次评估,有利于快速进行单次扫描的面部骨折特征描述:下颌骨、翼状突板、颧骨和骨性眼眶。也就是说,当依次完成时:1. 清除下颌骨可排除全面部粉碎性骨折。2. 清除翼状突板可有效地排除 Le Fort I、II 和 III 型骨折。3. 清除颧骨可有效地排除颧骨上颌复合体(ZMC)型骨折。4. 清除骨性眼眶可有效地排除鼻眶筛骨(NOE)骨折。按照这种排除和消除的过程;随着面部的上升,骨折特征变得更加易于管理和直接。除了识别所有骨折并使用适当的分类系统外,放射科医生还需要识别可能与面部骨折相关的关键临床相关软组织损伤,并在报告中解决这些问题。