Use of the facial dismasking flap approach for surgical treatment of a multifocal craniofacial abscess.
- Author:
Yoshitaka ISHII
1
;
Tomoyuki YANO
;
Osamu ITO
Author Information
- Publication Type:Case Report
- Keywords: Face; Orbit; Abscess; Facial bones
- MeSH: Abscess*; Cheek; Cicatrix; Debridement; Drainage; Emergency Service, Hospital; Facial Bones; Hematologic Tests; Humans; Maxillary Sinus; Maxillary Sinusitis; Orbit; Parietal Lobe; Sepsis; Surgeons; Temporal Muscle
- From:Archives of Plastic Surgery 2018;45(3):271-274
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:English
- Abstract: The decision of which surgical approach to use for the treatment of a multifocal craniofacial abscess is still a controversial matter. A failure to control disease progress in the craniofacial region can potentially put the patient's life at risk. Therefore, understanding the various ways to approach the craniofacial region helps surgeons to obtain satisfactory results in such cases. In this report, we describe a patient who visited the emergency department with a large swelling in his right cheek. A blood test and computed tomography revealed odontogenic maxillary sinusitis. The patient developed sepsis due to a progressive multifocal abscess. An abscess was seen in the temporal muscle, infratemporal fossa, and interorbital region. To control this multifocal abscess, we used the facial dismasking flap (FDF) approach. After debridement using the FDF approach, we succeeded in obtaining sufficient drainage of the abscess, and the patient recovered from sepsis. The advantages of the FDF approach are that it provides a wide surgical field, extending from the parietal region to the mid-facial region, and that it leaves no aesthetically displeasing scars on the face. The FDF approach may be one of the best options to approach multifocal abscesses in the craniofacial region.