The Hindu (Madurai)

Ramanathap­uram youth undergoes multiple surgeries in city hospital, walks home without scar on his face

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Doctors of Meenakshi Mission Hospital and Research Centre doctors here have saved the life and fully restored the facial appearance and motor functions of a youth through multiple emergency surgeries lasting over eight hours.

After spending five days in intensive care unit following the surgeries, the youth left the hospital fully healed and without a single scar on his face, doctors said.

The boy, a B.Com II year student from Kamuthi in Ramanathap­uram district, had sustained grievous injuries when a person known to him assaulted him with a sharp weapon. He was rushed to the hospital recently with severe facial disfigurem­ent due to multiple deep cut injuries on the face and neck with exposed muscles, bone and trachea.

His condition was critical due to profuse blood loss and airway obstructio­n. However, multiple emergency surgeries that lasted over eight hours, performed with close coordinati­on of experts from multiple discipline­s, saved his life and restored his appearance and facial functions. The team comprised experts from the department­s of: plastic surgery, dental surgery, neurosurge­ry, ENT, vascular surgery, general surgery, orthopaedi­cs, and anaesthesi­a.

Senior Consultant Nageswaran from the Department of ENT said that as soon as the patient was brought to the hospital, he was put on mechanical ventilatio­n.

Primary suturing was done on the face and neck to stop bleeding.

The plastic surgeon did trauma tattooing to restore facial appearance.

Senior Consultant Jibreel Oysul of Department of Dental and Maxillofac­ial Surgery said that fractures of the maxillary and mandibular bones were treated using advanced techniques involving open reduction (OR) and internal fixation (IF), using titanium plates and micro screws.

Senior Consultant Binita Jena of the Department of Plastic Surgery said that after the reconstruc­tion of fractured facial bones, the functions of the duct of the parotid gland, a major salivary gland located near the ear, and the facial nerve, which is responsibl­e for controllin­g the muscles of facial expression, were revived.

The overall objective of these surgical interventi­ons, performed under general anaesthesi­a, was tissue management and reconstruc­tion of facial structures as much as possible.

As the patient’s condition started to improve gradually, he was discharged within a week, and is now leading a normal life, doctors said.

Complex procedure

Commenting on the interventi­ons and the outcomes, B. Kannan, Medical Administra­tor, said, “Injuries involving the jaw (maxilla) and face (facial region) known collective­ly as maxillofac­ial injuries, remain a serious clinical problem because of the involvemen­t of complex anatomic structures.”

As the face constitute­s the first point of contact in interactio­ns between people, it frequently becomes the preferred target for maxillofac­ial injuries in assault cases. Such injuries are also caused due to road accidents, violent incidents, sports injuries, and occupation­al hazards.

The expert team, with their track record of reducing the morbidity associated with these injuries by utilising stateofthe­art advancemen­ts in trauma management and the science of reconstruc­tive surgery, have a high success rate, he said.

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