A Clinical Case of Delayed Posttraumatic Frontal Sinus Cerebrospinal Fluid Leakage Management Via External Surgical Approach

Abstract: Cerebrospinal fluid rhinorrhea is frequently encountered after a fracture of the skull base. Individual fractures of the posterior wall of the frontal sinus after brain injury are uncommon. The authors present a case of a 33-year-old man with a distant history of skull base injury after a traffic accident, 12 years ago. He presented with intermittent rhinorrhea and reported 2 episodes of bacterial meningitis the last 7 years since the injury. Cerebrospinal fluid leakage was confirmed with β2-transferrin testing. Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging revealed a small defect of the posterior and superior wall of the left frontal sinus and an ipsilateral meningoencephalocele. Finally, there was a communication between intracranial space and frontal sinus that caused meningitis. A coronal incision and frontal craniotomy with preservation of anterior pericranium was performed (frontal sinus cranialization using osteoplastic flap). In order to determine the precise margins of the frontal sinus and allow an accurate anterior table bone osteotomy and complete exposure of the sinus, the authors used a coronal view of skull X-ray. Scissors are then used to cut along the margins of the sinus. An “R” is scratched into the right side of template to record orientation. The template was sterilized and brought onto the surgical field and then placed over the left sinus An external surgical approach (anterior table bone osteotomy) with the modern techn...
Source: Journal of Craniofacial Surgery - Category: Surgery Tags: Technical Strategies Source Type: research