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Radioanatomical study of the extended free nasal floor mucosal graft and its clinical applications

Authors

Gonzalez-Garcia, Jaime , MORENO LUNA, RAMÓN, Palacios-Garcia, Jose , Del Cuvillo Bernal, Alfonso , Maza-Solano, Juan M. , Santos Perez, Jaime , Pinheiro-Neto, Carlos D. , Sanchez-Gomez, Serafin , Ambrosiani Fernandez, Jesus

External publication

No

Means

Laryngoscope Investig. Otol.

Scope

Article

Nature

Científica

JCR Quartile

SJR Quartile

JCR Impact

2.458

SJR Impact

1.134

Publication date

01/12/2020

ISI

000590120400001

Abstract

Objectives To perform a radio-anatomical evaluation of the nasal cavity floor free mucosal graft (endonasal extended mucoplasty, EEM) to repair mucosal defects after an extended ethmoid-sphenoidotomy. Methods A human cadaveric study (radiological and anatomical dissection) and an in vivo study in surgical patients with CRSwNP were performed. The EEM areas were compared between 3D reconstruction from CT scans and anatomical/surgical dissections, both in cadaver specimens and in patients. Feasibility was assessed by correlation between the EEM area on CT scans and when harvested in cadavers and when grafted in patients. Usefulness was assessed by the degree of coverage of the EEM in the surface exposed after an extended ethmoid-sphenoidotomy. Both feasibility and usefulness were assessed in cadaveric specimens (n = 15) and patients (n = 4). Results Fifteen cadaveric specimens and 4 patients with bilateral CRSwNP were included. The mean (SD) areas obtained in the cadaveric radiological and anatomical studies were 9.44 (2.07) cm(2) and 8.03 (1.36) cm(2), respectively (intraclass correlation coefficient 0.59, moderate correlation), and in 3D reconstruction for operated patients were 10.32 (0.98) cm(2) and 11.27 (2.44) cm(2), respectively. The coverage of the ethmoidal roof in the cadaveric dissection study was 100%, from the anterior ethmoidal artery to the posterior ethmoidal artery, covering the planun sphenoidale up to 75% in the case series. In 87.5% of the cases, up to 50% of the papiracea lamina was covered. Conclusion The EEM have shown to be a feasible and useful grafting technique to repair skull base defects after performing an extended ethmoid-sphenoidotomy during surgery for CRSwNP. Level of Evidence NA.

Keywords

chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps (CRSwNP); endonasal extended mucoplasty (EEM); grafting techniques; skullbase defects

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