Journal Basic Info

  • Impact Factor: 1.995**
  • H-Index: 8
  • ISSN: 2474-1647
  • DOI: 10.25107/2474-1647
**Impact Factor calculated based on Google Scholar Citations. Please contact us for any more details.

Major Scope

  •  Robotic Surgery
  •  Cardiovascular Surgery
  •  Ophthalmic Surgery
  •  Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery
  •  Plastic Surgery
  •  Obstetrics Surgery
  •  Gastroenterological Surgery
  •  Thoracic Surgery

Abstract

Citation: Clin Surg. 2016;1(1):1002.Case Report | Open Access

Postoperative Infection Caused by a Resorbable Plate used to Treat a Zygomatic Fracture

Sukegawa S, Kanno T, Kawai H, Shibata A, Sukegawa-Takahashi Y and Furuki Y

Division of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Kagawa Prefectural Central Hospital,Japan
Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Shimane University Faculty of Medicine, Shimane, Japan
Department of Oral Pathology and Medicine, Okayama University, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and
Pharmaceutical Sciences, Japan

*Correspondance to: Shintaro Sukegawa 

 PDF  Full Text DOI: 10.25107/2474-1647.1002

Abstract

A 58-year-old female patient was referred to our division of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeryby a general dental practitioner with swelling symptoms in the left cheek. Five months earlier, she had fractured her left zygomatic bone, which was fixed using a resorbable plate. A maxillofacial computed tomographic scan taken upon the first visit showed a clear swelling of the soft tissue next to the left maxillary sinus and a maxillary sinusitis. In addition, the plate at the zygomaticomaxillary buttress showed bone resorption surrounding the plate and the screws, possibly because of an infection affecting the area around both the plate and the screws. These were removed, and their molecular weight and average molecular weight measured following extraction. These measurements showed that the plate and the screws had progressively degraded. All symptoms immediately diminished after the operation and no evidence of infection was observed after 3 months after the operation.

Keywords

Resorbable plate; Postoperative infection; Molecular weight

Cite the article

Sukegawa S, Kanno T, Kawai H, Shibata A, Sukegawa-Takahashi Y, Furuki Y. Postoperative Infection Caused by a Resorbable Plate used to Treat a Zygomatic Fracture. Clin Surg. 2016; 1: 1002.

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