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Spontaneous Repositioning of Isolated Blow-In Orbital Roof Fracture: Could Wait and See Be a Strategy in Asymptomatic Cases?

14

Citations

29

References

2020

Year

Abstract

The literature regarding treatment of isolated orbital roof fractures is of poor quality partly due to the rarity of such lesions. A total of 4 studies limited to small case series with 13 patients in total discuss thoroughly management options and timing of treatment. In particular, displaced blow-in fractures were treated conservatively in 4 patients with only 2 benefitting from this approach. Our patient showed a spontaneous realignment of a posttraumatic blow-in orbital roof deformity and at 12-month follow-up conservative management appeared a safe and effective strategy. A short-term wait-and-see approach with aggressive follow-up imaging could probably represent a reasonable option for treatment of isolated blow-in orbital roof fractures without neurological or ocular symptoms. Since literature remains confined to limited case series, future multicenter studies adopting shared evaluation parameters would help in standardizing the indications for this subset of craniofacial injuries.

References

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