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Inferior alveolar nerve function after mandibular osteotomies
British Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, 1998A total of 1034 patients who had undergone orthognathic surgery were examined after 2 years; 818 had been treated with varying types of mandibular osteotomy such as vertical ramus osteotomy, sagittal split ramus osteotomy, and genioplasty. Neurosensory function in the mental nerve region was assessed by evaluating light touch perception.
A, Westermark, H, Bystedt, L, von Konow
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Facial nerve paralysis secondary to mandibular fracture
The Laryngoscope, 1980AbstractWhen facial nerve paralysis complicates a mandibular fracture, it may be difficult to locate the point of injury, since the nerve may be injured in the fallopian canal by a secondary temporal bone fracture or in soft tissue by mandibular fragments.
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Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery
Background: In children with Pierre Robin sequence (PRS), mandibular distraction osteogenesis (MDO) is routinely performed to alleviate airway obstruction; however, it involves risk of injury to the marginal mandibular nerve (MMN).
Sarah, Myers +12 more
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Background: In children with Pierre Robin sequence (PRS), mandibular distraction osteogenesis (MDO) is routinely performed to alleviate airway obstruction; however, it involves risk of injury to the marginal mandibular nerve (MMN).
Sarah, Myers +12 more
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Trigeminal (Gasserian) Ganglion, Maxillary Nerve, and Mandibular Nerve Blocks
2014The Gasserian (trigeminal) ganglion lies within Meckel’s cavity in the middle cranial fossa close to the petrous bone. It is surrounded medially by the cavernous sinus, superiorly by the inferior surface of the temporal lobe, and posteriorly by the brain stem. Gasserian ganglion has three divisions with a characteristic somatotopic arrangement, in that
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