INTRODUCTION
Traumatic amputations of the nasal tip are disfiguring injuries, which determine
important social rejection, imposing additional suffering on the patient and
those already caused by the wound and its functional limitations resulting from
the trauma.
Such defects represent a challenge for plastic surgeons, and several techniques
can be adopted to treat the same type of defect. In this work, three cases of
traumatic amputation exclusively of the nasal tip will be shown (without
affecting other aesthetic subunits) and their respective treatments to present
a
historical review and discussion of the techniques used to reconstruct the nasal
tip. The procedures were performed at the Federal Hospital of Andaraí, in Rio
de
Janeiro-RJ, in 2017 (case 1) and 2020 (case 3), and at the Universitary Hospital
Pedro Ernesto, Rio de Janeiro-RJ, in 2018 (case 2).
Case 1
Female patient, 25 years old, sought the plastic surgery service with
complaints of nasal deformity and respiratory obstruction. The patient
reported an episode of trauma in childhood (preschool age) with loss of full
thickness in the region of the nasal tip. The patient did not know how to
inform about the trauma mechanism but reported that, at the time, the wound
had been treated conservatively, healing by the second intention.
Upon examination, the patient had complete loss of the nasal tip and soft
triangles, with scar retraction leading to stenosis of the nasal external
valve (Figures 1A and 1B). The patient’s surgical treatment
was planned and carried out in 3 stages. In the first surgical procedure,
the scarring bands and underlying fibrosis were released, allowing the
assessment of the magnitude of the nasal lining deficiency (Figure 2A). A paramedian flap was then
made, folded over itself, to cover and line the nasal tip and smooth
triangles (Figure 2B).
Figure 1 - Case 1, preoperative. A: Previous view;
B: Profile view.
Figure 1 - Case 1, preoperative. A: Previous view;
B: Profile view.
Figure 2 - Case 1, transoperative. A: Resulting defect
after fibrosis release and scar retraction; B:
Transposed paramedian flap for recomposition of the lining and
coverage in the first stage.
Figure 2 - Case 1, transoperative. A: Resulting defect
after fibrosis release and scar retraction; B:
Transposed paramedian flap for recomposition of the lining and
coverage in the first stage.
After 4 weeks, the second surgical procedure was performed, separating the
covering and covering, the latter being kept connected to the supratrochlear
pedicle. After refinement of both flaps (liner and cover), the tip was
structured with auricular conchal cartilage, and the already refined cover
flap was then sutured again over the nasal tip. After an interval of another
4 weeks, the supratrochlear pedicle was sectioned with repositioning of the
eyebrow, thus achieving the result of the reconstruction (Figures 3A and 3B).
Figure 3 - Case 1, postoperative period of 6 months after the third
surgical procedure. A: Previous view;
B: Profile view.
Figure 3 - Case 1, postoperative period of 6 months after the third
surgical procedure. A: Previous view;
B: Profile view.
Case 2
Male patient, 35 years old, reports having suffered superficial nasal trauma
(blunt injury) complicated with infection during adolescence. On that
occasion, after antibiotic treatment to resolve the infectious process, the
bloody wound on the nasal tip received skin autograft. Upon examination, the
patient had no nasal tip, causing extreme aesthetic dissatisfaction for the
patient, but without functional complaints (Figures 4A and 4B). A
nasal reconstruction was then performed in three stages, as described in
case 1, with recomposition of the aesthetic unit of the nasal tip (Figures 5A and 5B).
Figure 4 - Case 2, preoperative. A: Previous view;
B: Profile view.
Figure 4 - Case 2, preoperative. A: Previous view;
B: Profile view.
Figure 5 - Case 2, 14-day postoperative period after the third surgical
procedure, in which the frontal scar (donor area) was refined.
A: Previous view; B: Profile
view.
Figure 5 - Case 2, 14-day postoperative period after the third surgical
procedure, in which the frontal scar (donor area) was refined.
A: Previous view; B: Profile
view.
Case 3
A 41-year-old female patient sought the plastic surgery service with complete
necrosis of the nasal tip. The patient reported being the victim of a canine
bite about 3 weeks before, with complete avulsion of the nasal tip. When
assisted at emergency service, the nasal tip that suffered avulsion was
sutured to the nose as an autologous composite graft. The patient then
evolved with complete necrosis of the nasal tip (Figures 6A and 6B). The necrotic tissues were debrided, and the area cleaned, with
the reconstruction being postponed to a second time, pending the
delimitation of the area of necrosis.
Figure 6 - Case 3, patient showing necrosis of the nasal tip 21 days
after an attempt to replant it during emergency room care.
A: Previous view; B: Profile
view.
Figure 6 - Case 3, patient showing necrosis of the nasal tip 21 days
after an attempt to replant it during emergency room care.
A: Previous view; B: Profile
view.
Six months after the initial care, and after the scar retraction had
stabilized (Figures 7A and 7B), the patient underwent a 3-step
reconstruction of the nasal tip, in the same way as in cases 1 and 2,
according to the technique advocated by Menick1,2:
elevation of the folded median flap to cover and line the first stage (Figures 8A and 8B); separation and refinement of the lining and
covering with cartilaginous structuring and resuture of the covering flap in
the second stage (Figures 9A and 9B), and finally section of the vascular
pedicle in the third stage, reaching the final result (Figures 10A and 10B).
Figure 7 - Case 3, six months after removal of necrotic material and
preoperatively before definitive reconstruction. A:
Previous view; B: Profile view.
Figure 7 - Case 3, six months after removal of necrotic material and
preoperatively before definitive reconstruction. A:
Previous view; B: Profile view.
Figure 8 - Case 3, transoperative of the first surgical procedure.
A: Resulting defect after fibrosis release and
scar retraction; B: Transposed paramedian flap for
lining recomposition and coverage in the first surgical
procedure.
Figure 8 - Case 3, transoperative of the first surgical procedure.
A: Resulting defect after fibrosis release and
scar retraction; B: Transposed paramedian flap for
lining recomposition and coverage in the first surgical
procedure.
Figure 9 - Case 3, transoperative of the second surgical procedure.
A: Structuring of the nasal tip with conchal
cartilage; B: Repositioned paramedian flap, after
refining its thickness, to recompose the coverage in the second
surgical procedure.
Figure 9 - Case 3, transoperative of the second surgical procedure.
A: Structuring of the nasal tip with conchal
cartilage; B: Repositioned paramedian flap, after
refining its thickness, to recompose the coverage in the second
surgical procedure.
Figure 10 - Case 3, six months postoperatively after the third surgical
procedure. A: Previous view; B:
Profile view.
Figure 10 - Case 3, six months postoperatively after the third surgical
procedure. A: Previous view; B:
Profile view.
DISCUSSION
The nasal tip occupies a central position on the human face, determining
aesthetic characteristics that make up the patient’s identity. In traumatic
amputations, full-thickness losses will require replacement of the lining (under
the smooth triangles, at the delicate junction with the nasal columella), as
well as the cartilaginous structure and skin coverage, to guarantee an esthetic
reconstruction.
Due to its permanent exposure, we know that the nose is extremely susceptible to
trauma and photodamage, which contributes to the tumors’ appearance. Throughout
its history, plastic surgery has developed several techniques for repairing
nasal tip injuries. These techniques, for the most part, include flaps that make
it possible to replace the skin in partial-thickness defects, basically
promoting the replacement of the skin coverage on the nasal tip.
The bilobed flap, initially described by Esser3, is referred to by several authors4,5 as the flap of choice for covering the tip of the nose
and should preferably be laterally pedicled. In 1967, Rieger6 described the lengthening of the
classic McGregor7 glabellar
flap up to the nasal tip. Two years later, Rintala &
Asko-Seljavaara8
presented the rectangular advancement flap with compensation triangles excised
on both sides of the base (Burow’s triangles) so that the flap reached from the
root to the tip along the nasal midline.
Among other cutaneous flaps to cover the tip, we can mention using nasolabial
flaps with a superior pedicle9
or inferior10 and Snow’s
horizontal “J” flap11. In the
last two decades, some myocutaneous flaps for the nasal tip have also been
described, mono or bipedicled in the nasal branch(es) of the angular
artery12-16, whose coverage reach can
reach the columella17.
In the case of traumatic injuries that lead to full-thickness defects, we know
that the nasal tip is the most exposed area of the face when treating patients
with facial trauma. Blunt injuries tend to be more frequent due to causes
related to traffic accidents. However, lacerations resulting in loss of
substance are also common, not only due to traffic accidents but also to bites
by domestic animals and injuries from firearms, generating more complex
deformities to be reconstructed.
The reconstruction in these cases will involve the total recomposition of the
lost segment, guaranteeing the volume and shape necessary to recompose the
aesthetic subunit. The flaps described above, which only guarantee skin
coverage, will be insufficient, as in these cases, there is a need to replace
the lining and cartilaginous structure of the segment amputated by the
trauma.
Historically, the oldest technique was described by Sushruta Samhita18 (around 600 BC), who uses the
midfrontal flap based on the supratrochlear vessels bilaterally, the so-called
Indian flap. The tip of the Indian flap, folded over itself, with the thickness
of the frontal aponeurotic galea and the subcutaneous tissue, fulfilled the
function of restoring volume to the amputated nose. In the case of defects
restricted to the nasal lobe, the tendency towards progressive bulging due to
contraction of the soft parts in this very thick flap (a “pin-cushioning”
phenomenon) could even contribute to improving the aesthetic result by mimicking
a rounded nasal tip. - which certainly does not occur in the more proximal
defects.
In Italy at the end of the 15th century, Alessandro Benedetti apud
Jewett & Baker19 described
the so-called Italian method, using a pedicled flap on the arm, thus allowing
the transfer of subcutaneous tissue to replace the loss of volume, in addition
to the skin for coverage. This technique was recommended until the beginning
of
the 20th century, being defended by Nélaton20.
With the advent of the First World War, Gillies-Filatov tubes21 were also used as a volume
replacement method, requiring several surgical steps for tissue transfer and
subsequent refinement. A modern variant of these old methods of tissue transfer
was described by Abbenhaus22,
who, claiming to avoid scarring and facial mutilation, described a flap using
the abdomen as the initial donor area and the wrist as an intermediate transfer
site up to the nose. In the interwar period, Rethi apud Kirshner23 also described sequential
tissue transfer techniques for the nasal tip from nasolabial flaps.
After the Second World War, a simpler solution indicated for small losses of
nasal tip substance in its convexity (not involving smooth triangles) was
described by Cronin24 in 1951,
in which the nasal dorsum skin is transferred to the tip. At the same time, the
frontotemporal flap by Schmid25 was described, which allows thinner skin to be applied to
the nasal tip region, with more aesthetic results involving lining and
structuring. However, this last flap is non-axial, less reliable, and requires
multiple stages for its preparation.
This is precisely the greatest limitation of these techniques that involve the
transfer of non-axial pedicled flaps to replace volume in the nasal tip: the
need for multiple surgical stages - first to transfer the tissue and then to
make the necessary refinements to obtain a better result. acceptable. The
techniques described above serve to mimic the convexity of the nasal tip, in
its
most superior and anterior portion. However, we know that the anatomy of the
nasal tip is delicate, especially in the region surrounding the infratip and
the
smooth triangles, whose refined design in the nostril rim and transition to the
nasal vestibule is difficult to reproduce using these conventional
techniques.
In an attempt to circumvent this limitation, Gillies26 described the association of a conch
chondrocutaneous composite graft (used for structuring and lining) to the
“up-and-down” flap (a variant of the frontal flap) in 1943. However, we know
that composite grafts have limitations related to their maximum size. There are
reports of successfully grafted large segments27,28, or
of techniques that allow greater reliability29 in the “take” of composite grafts, but the vast
majority of authors agree that composite grafts are unreliable for repairing
defects larger than 15mm30.
At the beginning of the millennium, the systematization of the paramedian flap in
three stages, as proposed by Menick1,2, through a
technically simple and easily reproducible method, allowed a greater refinement
of the surgical result. Adding one more intermediate stage, in which the
paramedian flap is refined, allowed for delicate and aesthetic results in the
nostril rim of smooth triangles and at the entrance to the nasal vestibule,
without the gross convexity that characterizes flaps folded over themselves.
In addition, this additional intermediate stage also makes it possible to
reposition and/or add structural grafts, making the results of nasal tip repairs
more predictable, ensuring a better result in the long term. Because it uses
an
axial flap (paramedian flap based on the ipsilateral supratrochlear artery),
the
technique proved to be very reliable, reproducible, and with a low rate of
complications.
CONCLUSION
Despite the various technical possibilities that emerged in the plastic surgery
armamentarium with its historical evolution, today, the systematization of nasal
reconstruction has made reconstructive plastic surgery more reliable and
reproducible techniques, exemplified in the cases above by the paramedian flap
in three stages, thus allowing the rehabilitation of these patients through more
aesthetic and refined results.
1. Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro,
Faculdade de Ciências Médicas, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil
2. Hospital Universitário Pedro Ernesto, Serviço
de Cirurgia Plástica, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil
3. Hospital Federal do Andaraí, Serviço de
Cirurgia Plástica, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil
Corresponding author: Michel Luciano Holger Toledano
Vaena, Av. Prof. Manuel de Abreu, 444, 2º and., Vila Isabel, Rio de
Janeiro, RJ, Brazil, Zip Code: 20550-170, E-mail:
michel.vaena@hotmail.com