Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3152919 Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery 2014 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

PurposeThe etiology of nasal septal perforations involves iatrogenic, traumatic, inflammatory, infectious, neoplastic, and caustic causes. To ensure successful closure, an appropriate interpositional graft material should be selected, and this graft material should be covered with healthy tissue.Materials and MethodsThe study included 18 New Zealand white rabbits weighing 2 to 2.5 kg. Nasal septal perforations were created in group 1. After the creation of defects in group 2, repair was performed with cartilage graft and bilateral mucoperichondrial advancement flaps. After septal nasal perforations in group 3, the defect was covered with fingernail and bilateral mucoperichondrial flaps.ResultsAt week 12, the rabbits were sacrificed. The septum site that had been repaired with fingernail was intact. No nail exposition, wound site decomposition, or re-perforation was observed. No findings of a breach of the structural integrity of the fingernails or disintegration were encountered.ConclusionFingernails can be used as an interpositional graft material in place of cartilage in eligible cases for the repair of nasal septal perforations. Fingernails have several properties that enable their use in such cases, such as form preservation that is similar to cartilage, the lack of live cells, easy availability, and a lack of donor-site morbidity at removal.

Related Topics
Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Dentistry, Oral Surgery and Medicine
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