
idnap
Bronze
- Joined
- May 21, 2025
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Thank fuck for lefort existing but its obviously an invasive surgery that is pretty serious cus its your fucking face youre dealing with
A lefort 2 sounds lovely on paper but with some chat gpt responses it looks like it's a no go for most surgeons
What's the lefort 2 alternative? Lefort 1 + zygo/cheekbone implants+ paranasal implants?
Here's a direct comparison of Le Fort I vs Le Fort II fractures focusing on:
1.
Why Le Fort II has higher mortality:
2.
Le Fort II is more prone to:
A lefort 2 sounds lovely on paper but with some chat gpt responses it looks like it's a no go for most surgeons
What's the lefort 2 alternative? Lefort 1 + zygo/cheekbone implants+ paranasal implants?
Here's a direct comparison of Le Fort I vs Le Fort II fractures focusing on:
- Mortality rates
- Complication (“botch”) rates — focusing on surgical complications, poor healing, infection, malocclusion, etc.
Quick Background (for context)
Feature | Le Fort I | Le Fort II |
---|---|---|
Fracture Type | Horizontal fracture of the maxilla | Pyramidal fracture involving maxilla, nasal bones, orbital floor |
Trauma Severity | Often low to moderate | Moderate to high — usually higher-energy trauma |
Surgical Complexity | Relatively straightforward | More complex due to orbit, nasal, and infraorbital involvement |
1.
Mortality Rates
Type | Isolated Fracture Mortality | With Polytrauma |
---|---|---|
Le Fort I | <1% | 5–10% (rare cases) |
Le Fort II | 1–5% | 10–30% or higher |
Why Le Fort II has higher mortality:
- Associated with higher-energy trauma
- More likely to involve airway compromise, orbital injuries, and brain trauma
- Often part of polytrauma scenarios (e.g., MVCs, falls from height)
2.
Botch / Complication Rates (post-surgical or healing-related)
Common complications across both:
- Infection
- Nonunion or malunion
- Malocclusion
- Nerve damage (e.g., infraorbital nerve paresthesia)
- Cosmetic deformity
Type | Complication Rate | Notes |
---|---|---|
Le Fort I | ~5–10% | Low risk with proper ORIF and sterile technique |
Le Fort II | ~10–25% | Higher due to orbit/nasal/nerve involvement, difficult reduction |
Le Fort II is more prone to:
- Infraorbital nerve damage
- Nasal airway obstruction
- Orbital floor issues (enophthalmos, diplopia)
- Higher infection risk due to sinus/nasal involvement
Literature Highlights
- Le Fort I surgery (e.g., orthognathic procedures) has a high success rate with low morbidity, often done electively.
- Le Fort II injuries are almost always trauma-induced and carry higher perioperative risks, difficult reduction, and functional complications.
Summary Table
Feature | Le Fort I | Le Fort II |
---|---|---|
Mortality (isolated) | <1% | 1–5% |
Mortality (polytrauma) | 5–10% | 10–30%+ |
Surgical “botch” rate | 5–10% | 10–25% |
Common complications | Malocclusion, infection | Nerve injury, nasal deformity, orbital issues |
Cause | Often planned surgery | High-energy blunt trauma |