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Management of Nasal Fractures

Archives of Family Medicine, 2000
The nasal bones are the most commonly fractured bones in the body. Accurate diagnosis and appropriate surgical intervention are key in the management of nasal fractures. While these injuries are not life-threatening, mismanagement of nasal fractures can lead to both aesthetic and functional deformities.
B, Rubinstein, E B, Strong
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Nasal Fractures in Children

Postgraduate Medicine, 1970
Neglected or inadequately treated nasal injury often has serious physiologic and psychologic effects. To postpone correction in the hope that time and growth will bring improvement is to invite the development of a worse defect that is far harder to correct.
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Management of Nasal Fractures

Otolaryngologic Clinics of North America, 1991
Fracture of the nasal skeleton is a relatively common injury. Satisfactory treatment requires appropriate skills, diagnosis, and management. Some injuries require immediate attention; others are better treated in delayed fashion. Closed reduction provides satisfactory treatment in the majority of nasal fractures; however, open reduction often is a more
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Nasal fractures.

The Journal of trauma, 1975
Although diagnosis and treatment of acute nasal fractures are usually relatively simple, they often go undiagnosed and untreated because of frequent dependence on the reports of facial-bone X-rays taken through the emergency room. A routine method of managing displaced nasal fractures has given excellent results with almost no complications.
RICHARD C. SCHULTZ   +1 more
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[Nasal Fracture].

Harefuah
Nasal fractures are the most prevalent among facial fractures, constituting 40-50% of all such injuries. They can be isolated or accompany multi-system trauma, including damage to soft tissues or other fractures. When addressing a patient with a suspected nasal fracture, anamnesis is paramount.
Shaked, Shivatzki, Arkadi, Yakirevitch
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Nasal Fractures

2019
The nose has several vital functions, including respiration and olfaction. The nose, as the leading point of the face, is without protective covering and is the least resistant of the facial bones to the application of a directional mechanical force.
Christine J. Lee, Raj M. Vyas
openaire   +1 more source

Management of Nasal Fractures

Atlas of the Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery Clinics, 2019
Tirbod, Fattahi, Salam, Salman
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Completing the nasal fracture

The Laryngoscope, 1984
D R, Chatham, P F, Teague
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Isolated Nasal Fractures

Atlas of the Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery Clinics, 1994
A K, Hegtvedt, P E, Larsen
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