Finite Element Model Analysis of Cephalic Trim on Nasal Tip Stability.

JAMA facial plastic surgery 2015 Vol.17(6) p. 413-20

Leary RP, Manuel CT, Shamouelian D, Protsenko DE, Wong BJ

관련 도메인

Abstract

[IMPORTANCE] Alar rim retraction is the most common unintended consequence of tissue remodeling that results from overresection of the cephalic lateral crural cartilage; however, the complex tissue remodeling process that produces this shape change is not well understood.

[OBJECTIVES] To simulate how resection of cephalic trim alters the stress distribution within the human nose in response to tip depression (palpation) and to simulate the internal forces generated after cephalic trim that may lead to alar rim retraction cephalically and upward rotation of the nasal tip.

[DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS] A multicomponent finite element model was derived from maxillofacial computed tomography with 1-mm axial resolution. The 3-dimensional editing function in the medical imaging software was used to trim the cephalic portion of the lower lateral cartilage to emulate that performed in typical rhinoplasty. Three models were created: a control, a conservative trim, and an aggressive trim. Each simulated model was imported to a software program that performs mechanical simulations, and material properties were assigned. First, nasal tip depression (palpation) was simulated, and the resulting stress distribution was calculated for each model. Second, long-term tissue migration was simulated on conservative and aggressive trim models by placing normal and shear force vectors along the caudal and cephalic borders of the tissue defect.

[RESULTS] The von Mises stress distribution created by a 5-mm tip depression revealed consistent findings among all 3 simulations, with regions of high stress being concentrated to the medial portion of the intermediate crus and the caudal septum. Nasal tip reaction force marginally decreased as more lower lateral cartilage tissue was resected. Conservative and aggressive cephalic trim models produced some degree of alar rim retraction and tip rotation, which increased with the magnitude of the force applied to the region of the tissue defect.

[CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE] Cephalic trim was performed on a computerized composite model of the human nose to simulate conservative and aggressive trims. Internal forces were applied to each model to emulate the tissue migration that results from decades of wound healing. Our simulations reveal that the degree of tip rotation and alar rim retraction is dependent on the amount of cartilage that was resected owing to cephalic trim. Tip reaction force is marginally reduced with increasing tissue volume resection.

[LEVEL OF EVIDENCE] NA.

추출된 의학 개체 (NER)

유형영어 표현한국어 / 풀이UMLS CUI출처등장
해부 tip 코끝 dict 5
해부 nasal tip 코끝 dict 4
해부 alar 콧방울 dict 4
시술 rhinoplasty 코성형술 dict 1
해부 tissue scispacy 1
해부 overresection scispacy 1
해부 cephalic scispacy 1
해부 caudal scispacy 1
해부 medial scispacy 1
해부 crus scispacy 1
해부 Nasal scispacy 1
해부 cartilage scispacy 1
해부 septum 비중격 dict 1
합병증 Cephalic Trim scispacy 1
합병증 maxillofacial scispacy 1
합병증 wound scispacy 1
약물 [IMPORTANCE] Alar rim scispacy 1
약물 [OBJECTIVES] scispacy 1
약물 [DESIGN scispacy 1
약물 [CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE] Cephalic scispacy 1
질환 depression C0011570
Mental Depression
scispacy 1
기타 cephalic lateral crural cartilage scispacy 1
기타 human nose scispacy 1
기타 alar rim scispacy 1
기타 cephalic scispacy 1
기타 caudal septum scispacy 1

MeSH Terms

Biomechanical Phenomena; Finite Element Analysis; Humans; Models, Biological; Nasal Cartilages; Nasal Septum; Rhinoplasty; Tomography, X-Ray Computed

🔗 함께 등장하는 도메인

이 논문이 속한 카테고리와 같은 논문에서 자주 함께 다뤄지는 카테고리들

관련 논문