4.5 Article

Does a closed reduction improve aesthetical and functional outcome after nasal fracture?

Journal

EUROPEAN ARCHIVES OF OTO-RHINO-LARYNGOLOGY
Volume 280, Issue 5, Pages 2299-2308

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00405-022-07754-4

Keywords

Quality of life; Nasal fracture; Functional Rhinoplasty Outcome Inventory; Rhinoplasty Outcome Evaluation; Closed reduction

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This study investigated the impact of closed reduction (CR) surgery on the quality of life (QoL) of patients with nasal fractures. The results showed that the surgery improved the aesthetic outcome of the nose but did not significantly affect its functional outcome.
Background and purposes How closed reduction (CR) to repair a nasal fracture affects the patient's quality of life (QoL) has not been investigated. Here, we assessed QoL before and after CR using disease-specific questionnaires and compared the QoL scores of patients with nasal fractures with normative scores from a reference cohort. Methods This was a prospective study of 96 patients with nasal fractures undergoing CR. Patients were interviewed about aesthetic, functional, and QoL issues before and after surgery using the Functional Rhinoplasty Outcome Inventory (FROI-17) and the Rhinoplasty Outcome Evaluation (ROE). Photographs of the nasal area were taken before and after surgery and reviewed. Data were compared with those from a reference cohort (n = 1000). Results Most fractures were type I (80.6%) and most were caused by sport-related accidents (36.5%). The ROE scores increased from 67.3 preoperatively to 73.4 postoperatively (p = 0.001). The FROI-17 also improved, indicating the overall effect of the nose on QoL (p = 0.002). Compared with the reference cohort, patients felt more affected by nasal symptoms before surgery (- 9.37, p = 0.02) than by more general aspects. ROE scores returned to normative values after surgery (p < 0.001). The postoperative cohort had lower scores for the FROI-17 item overall effects of the nose on QoL than the reference cohort did, although the nasal symptom score remained higher in patients than in reference controls. Conclusions This study showed that CR can improve the aesthetical but not the functional outcome of the nose.

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