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Maxillofacial & Facial Trauma

🦷 Maxillofacial & Facial Trauma

Initial assessment, Le Fort fractures, mandibular fractures, orbital blowout, and chemical eye burns — airway first, always.

Initial Trauma Assessment — Facial Injuries

Facial injuries are rarely immediately life-threatening in isolation, but they can rapidly compromise the airway through haemorrhage, oedema, displaced fractures, and foreign bodies. Always follow ATLS principles: Airway with C-spine control → Breathing → Circulation → Disability → Exposure.

Airway is the Priority — Assume C-Spine Injury Until Proven Otherwise

All significant facial trauma must be treated as having an associated cervical spine injury until imaging excludes it. Maintain in-line cervical stabilisation throughout airway management. Massive midface trauma can cause posterior displacement of the midface, obstructing the nasopharynx. Haemorrhage into the oropharynx, fractured teeth, and disrupted bony architecture may all rapidly threaten the airway. Early anaesthetic involvement for airway control is essential.

Airway Management Considerations

  • Orotracheal intubation: Preferred route. Can be performed with in-line cervical stabilisation.
  • Nasotracheal intubation: Contraindicated in suspected cribriform plate fracture (Le Fort II/III, midface trauma, basal skull fracture) — risk of intracranial passage. Suspect cribriform plate fracture with: CSF rhinorrhoea, periorbital ecchymosis (panda eyes), Battle’s sign, anosmia.
  • Surgical airway: Cricothyroidotomy or surgical tracheostomy if oral intubation fails or is contraindicated. Cricothyroidotomy landmark: midline depression between thyroid cartilage (above) and cricoid (below).
  • Nasogastric tubes: MUST be placed orally (OGT) in any midface fracture — nasal placement risks intracranial passage through a cribriform plate defect.

Nasogastric Tube — Never Via Nose in Midface Trauma

Case reports document NGT placement into the cranial vault through a cribriform plate fracture. In any patient with significant midface or frontobasal skull trauma, insert all tubes orally. This includes NGT, gastric tubes, and nasopharyngeal airways. The same applies in any patient with suspected basal skull fracture — use an oropharyngeal airway instead of a nasopharyngeal airway.

Facial Oedema — Rapid Assessment Required

  • Facial swelling progresses rapidly post-trauma — assessment window is narrow before oedema obscures anatomy
  • Periorbital swelling can prevent adequate eye examination — document visual acuity, pupillary reflexes, and extraocular movements before swelling worsens
  • Tense periorbital haematoma may cause orbital compartment syndrome — emergency lateral canthotomy and cantholysis if VA deteriorating, IOP >40 mmHg, or proptosis with afferent pupillary defect

Signs of Basal Skull Fracture

SignDescriptionMechanism
Panda eyes (periorbital ecchymosis)Bilateral “raccoon” bruising around eyesAnterior cranial fossa fracture → blood tracks into periorbital fat
Battle’s signBruising over mastoid processMiddle cranial fossa / petrous temporal bone fracture → blood tracks along fascial planes
CSF rhinorrhoeaClear fluid from nose — positive “halo sign” on paper, glucose-positiveCribriform plate fracture → dural tear → CSF leaks through nose. Risk of ascending meningitis.
CSF otorrhoeaClear fluid from earPetrous temporal bone fracture → CSF leaks via torn TM or through Eustachian tube
AnosmiaLoss of smellCribriform plate fracture → shearing of olfactory filaments (CN I)
HaemotympanumBlood behind tympanic membraneMiddle cranial fossa / petrous fracture

Haemorrhage Control in Facial Trauma

Severe midface fractures can cause life-threatening haemorrhage from branches of the maxillary artery (sphenopalatine, descending palatine, posterior superior alveolar). Initial management: direct pressure, anterior/posterior nasal packing (Foley catheter posteriorly), and correction of coagulopathy. Persistent haemorrhage requires: interventional radiology (selective embolisation) of internal maxillary artery branches, or external carotid artery ligation. NEVER overlook blood loss from facial fractures — up to 2 litres can be lost into the midface compartments.

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