Fig. 292.Fig. 293.Anterior Superior Third Nasal Deficiency and Correction Thereof.
Fig. 292.Fig. 293.Anterior Superior Third Nasal Deficiency and Correction Thereof.
Fig. 292.Fig. 293.
Anterior Superior Third Nasal Deficiency and Correction Thereof.
The needle should be introduced laterally and anterior to the angular vessels to prevent their occlusion and injection. The point of selection is made at about the middle of the deformity. The needle is introduced until its point lies in the center of the depression, or at the median line from the anterior view.
The mass is injected slowly as the skin of the nose is pinched up between the forefinger and thumb of an assistant.
The part is injected until a tumefaction, equal in body to the extent of the deformity, is attained.
The needle is allowed to remain in place for a moment, to permit of a stoppage of the threadlike mass, usually following the pressure applied to the piston, after the operator has stopped turning the screw. This will prevent the mass from following into the channel made by the needle, or the backing up of the mass, as it were. Should this occur the paraffin mixture should be squeezed from the skin opening to prevent the formation of an intercutaneous encystment.
Immediately the needle is withdrawn the operator places a finger tip over the opening and proceeds with the thumb and forefinger of the right hand to mold the mass into the desired shape.
The post-operative treatment should be as previously given, and is the same with all injections about the nose, so that it will not be referred to again under this heading.
While a fairly large defect can be corrected at one sitting, it is advisable to rather reinject one or two weeks later to secure the exact shape.
It is to be impressed upon the operator that there is always a slight broadening of this part of the nose following the development of the connective tissue which takes the place of the injected mass, hence the injection should not be overcrowded nor the parts overcorrected.
The mass should be molded out as narrow as possible and be pinched between the fingers by the patient twoor three times a day after the reaction has subsided, which is usually about the third day. This procedure will keep the mass from being flattened during the time tissue replacement takes place.
Middle Third Deficiency.—This defect is commonly seen in football players and pugilists as the result of a breaking of the inferior extremities of the nasal bones and the displacement of the articulating cartilages, although the defect is often seen as a result of an injury to the nose early in life, causing a lack of development in the superior or articulating extremities of the cartilages. Nondevelopment from catarrh, syphilis, and intranasal disease are other causes. This type of deformity is generally designated as the saddle nose.
In the latter cases the skin is usually bound down to the cartilaginous structure by cicatricial bands, and needs to be liberated. This is accomplished subcutaneously with a fine tenotome introduced laterally.
To assure the operator of a thorough dissection he may inject the site with sterile water through the opening made with the knife, squeezing it out before injecting the nose.
If the skin has had to be freed by surgical means the mass injected should be sufficient to overcome the defect almost entirely, to prevent the reformation of the bands of connective tissue which have been severed. Their re-establishment would mean an unequal development of the new connective tissue springing up from the injected mass, thus defeating the object of the operation.
If no dissection has been done the defect should be corrected about two thirds and added to by a subsequent injection.
The mass in either case should be well molded out, especially at both sides, to keep the nose as narrow as possible. There will be more or less widening ultimately following the organization of the mass.
Fig. 294.Fig. 295.Anterior Median Third Nasal Deficiency and Correction Thereof.
Fig. 294.Fig. 295.Anterior Median Third Nasal Deficiency and Correction Thereof.
Fig. 294.Fig. 295.
Anterior Median Third Nasal Deficiency and Correction Thereof.
It is not uncommon to find a dividing wall of subcutaneous tissue about the articulation of the nasal bones and cartilages, as evidenced by a rising up or down of the injected mass above or below this line. If this be found, rather than break down this wall with the injection, it is deemed advisable to inject each chamber separately and mold the two masses after injection, as in the ordinary type of cases.
Inferior Third Deficiency.—This deformity of the nose is due purely to a lack of development or a luxation of the cartilage of the septum and the upper lateral cartilages. The point or lobule of the nose is usually tilted upward and the subseptum curved upward at its middle third.
The cause of this deformity is usually due to direct violence at some time in life, with improper replacement at the time of injury. Syphilis and intranasal catarrh, lupus and ulcerative diseases, are also causes.
The skin overlying the defect may or may not be closely adherent, but is in most cases rather thickened and inelastic. It is therefore necessary, in most cases, to loosen the skin by subcutaneous dissection, done as already described before the injection is made.
To rebuild such a nasal defect without dissection, except in such instances where the skin is quite elastic, is not to be advised, since the injected mass would be flattened, more or less, antero-posteriorly, giving the nose a broad and ugly appearance after the connective-tissue formation has been attained.
It is with cases of this kind that paraffin injections introduced in the liquid form and of high melting points are usually expelled in a week or ten days, or even later, subsequent to a breaking down of the surrounding tissues and the resultant abscess.
The best preparation to employ is the form of paraffin mixture advocated in the preceding operation used in its cold state and injected slowly, after the integument has been rendered mobile enough to permit the desirable correction.
Fig. 296.Fig. 297.Anterior Inferior Third Nasal Deficiency and Correction Thereof.
Fig. 296.Fig. 297.Anterior Inferior Third Nasal Deficiency and Correction Thereof.
Fig. 296.Fig. 297.
Anterior Inferior Third Nasal Deficiency and Correction Thereof.
The defect should not be corrected in one sitting, for the very reason that some widening of the nose may take place, owing to the contractility of the skin, post-operatio.
The mass injected should correct the major part of the defect and be molded out carefully, especially from both sides of the nose, and the patient be instructed to pinch the nose laterally several times a day after the reactive inflammation has subsided with the object of keeping the nose as narrow as possible.
After the mass has been thoroughly replaced with connective tissue and the anterior line is found to be too depressed, a fine line of the mass about the thickness of the needle may be injected over it in a vertical direction, the point of a fairly large needle being introduced just above the anterior aspect of the lobule and thrust upward to the superior border of the now existing deformity, and be slowly withdrawn as the mass is injected.
This will leave a rounded cylindrical-like mass along the anterior nasal line, which must not be molded at all, except to soften or shade off the superior and inferior extremities.
The author advocates making two such injections, at the same sitting, when the deformity has persisted. These injections are made parallel to each other with a distance of about one eighth inch between them.
The subseptal deficiency will also have to be corrected. This will be referred to later under its separate division.
The reaction in cases of this type is usually more severe than those just mentioned. There may be considerable swelling and discoloration, but by following the methods of treatment laid down heretofore the symptoms usually subside in two or three days.
Superior Half Deficiency.—In this type of deformity there is found a nondevelopment of the bridge of the nose, while the greater part of the cartilage of the septum and the lower lateral cartilages seem to be quite normal incontour. The nose has a dished appearance, with an undue prominence of the nasal base or lower half.
Various causes may be given to this condition, but heredity is responsible in a great majority of the cases.
The deformity in the type under consideration rarely takes in an accurate half of the nose, there being an involvement more or less of the lower anterior half, yet it is sufficiently distinctive to give it specific classification.
For the correction of the defect in such cases the injection is made laterally, the same mass being employed as in the preceding cases.
In this type of case the mass injected should quite correct the defect and be molded with great care to a desired contour, keeping in mind always the condition and elasticity of the skin overlying it.
An inflexible skin should be rendered mobile by digital massage, practiced for a few days prior to operation, or in tense conditions be loosened by subcutaneous dissection.
The great fault in injecting so large a quantity as is necessary in these cases is to make the nose too wide from the very beginning, which, added to the widening following the replacement by new tissue, makes the shape of the nose unsatisfactory.
For this reason it will be found of some benefit to apply an anterior nasal splint of aluminium, covered interiorly with a fold of white flannel or gauze and pressed into such shape that when applied to the nose it will keep the latter pinched up laterally to the desired width. This splint will hardly ever be borne by a patient and causes great discomfort until after the post-operative reaction has subsided. It may then be bandaged or held in place by strips of Z. O. Adhesive plaster for an hour or two in the day and during the entire night.
After the first few days’ wearing the patient soon becomes accustomed to the splint. It should be worn as mentioned for about three weeks, when the patient maybe permitted to pinch the nose laterally with his fingers two or three times a week or more.
The secondary injection may be made in the ordinary way or as advocated by the author in the manner described in correcting defects of the inferior third of the nose.
Inferior Half Deficiency.—In this type of deformity the greater point of nondevelopment or deficiency is found at the upper extremity of the cartilage of the septum, below its articulation with the inferior border of the nasal bones, and involving to a greater extent the area over the upper lateral cartilages.
This deformity, due to whatever cause, rarely affects the base or inferior part of the nose, owing undoubtedly to the greater protection and stability offered by the lower lateral and sesamoid cartilages and the dense cellular tissue making up the alæ. Except in such cases where violence of an extreme nature has been exerted in early life, or where ulcerative disease has broken down most of the cartilage of the septum, the point of the nose is usually normal in size and shape. In the latter cases there is an upper tilt of the lobule and a shortening of the columna upon itself with a convexity in an upward direction.
The cause of this type of deformity is usually a direct blow upon the point of the nose, syphilitic ulceration internally, catarrh, or other ulcerative disease.
When due to violence the point of the nose may or may not present a normal appearance, there may be a normal base tilted upward (retroussé or snout nose) or a dropping forward and downward (hook or beak nose).
The shape of the nasal base depends much upon the time of life the injury was received—that is, before or long after puberty, also upon the extent of injury inflicted and where applied.
From injuries received early in life we may look to a lack of development in the cartilage of the septumalone, or associated with deficiency in one or both lateral cartilages.
The deformity is usually symmetrical, but where the nasal bones have been injured as well, particularly where one bone is injured more than its fellow, there is a possibility of the disfigurement being unilateral. This is rarely the case except when due to punctured wounds; generally in such cases the anterior nasal line assumes a twisted form.
Some operators have included noses of undue lobular prominence (à la Cyrano de Bergerac) under this type of deformity, and while it is to be admitted such a nose might be built up by subcutaneous prothesis the result is anything but harmonious or normal. Such a nose should be reduced by cutting operations instead of being added to. The seeming depression above the lobule is only comparative to the overdeveloped form of the lobule. The face values of every patient should be studied, and the surgeon should never attempt to break up the harmony of facial form by simplifying an operation and rendering the patient’s appearance even more ridiculous than before his attempt to correct a fault.
The correction of the deficiencies of the lower half of the nose is associated with difficulties in various directions. Either the skin over the defect is too dense to render injection an easy matter, or the nose is so broadened horizontally from the original injury that the injection, no matter how artistically done, leaves the nose bulky and ugly in appearance.
When the nasal processes of the superior maxillary bones have not been widened unduly by an injury and the skin is dense, simple subcutaneous dissection before injection will overcome the difficulty easily enough.
In that case the needle is inserted laterally in a line with the maximum depth of the depression and the point shoved up to the median line anteriorly.
Enough of the cold mixture of paraffin and vaselin, asheretofore advised, is injected to reduce the deformity nearly to the normal.
The mass is molded to give the nose as near a normal contour as possible, always keeping in mind the later broadening of the nose when the new connective tissue has taken the place of the injected mass. A later injection made, as advised heretofore, will restore the anterior line to better form.
If the nasal processes of the superior maxillary bones have been thrown outward considerably a surgical operation is necessary to reduce them.
No injection should be made until the wounds from such operation are thoroughly healed and contracted.
In all cases of this type the skin will be found to be rather dense and likely to be tied down by past inflammations to the anterior aspects of the lower lateral cartilages at their juncture with the upper lateral cartilages. If the adhesions are not too dense the harder form of the cold mixture should be used. This will not only permit of raising the skin more readily than with a softer kind of mixture, but will be more likely to retain its form under the contractile pressure brought to bear down upon it.
When the skin is closely adherent it should be loosened subcutaneously, as already advised. The injection may be done at the same sitting, and be of greater quantity than in the cases where this had not been done, for the reasons mentioned.
Pressure splints and manual compression should be employed as in the preceding deformity.
The reaction following the first injection is likely to be severe. Cold applications, as previously referred to, are indicated, and should be continued for at least two days.
Care should be taken not to inject into the lateral vessels, which usually lie on a line with the juncture between the lateral and lower lateral cartilages. If this shouldhappen, the point of the nose at once assumes a bluish hue, and there is more or less pain felt at once, with considerable swelling a few hours after the injection. Later, every symptom of gangrene of the lobule is liable to be noticed, yet with faithful attention to furthering the circulation of the parts by either cold or hot applications, the active inflammatory symptoms usually subside in ten to fourteen days, leaving the patient with a whole nose, more or less colored at the lobule, according to the state of the circulation and the exposure of the parts to the various temperatures. This may be overcome in time, yet it may persist for years, depending entirely upon the ability of the anastomosing vessels to overcome the artificial thrombus or occlusion offered by the mass injected.
That a reaction quite similar in character, but of milder degree, is likely to be seen when one of these vessels has not been injected, can be readily understood when we consider that a hard and somewhat ungiving mass is made to overlie the vessels themselves. The symptoms just described in such case are apt to be noted much later, even several hours after the injection, because the swelling has then begun to add its pressure to that of the mass in obstructing the flow of blood to the lobule. Such condition may be termed pressure occlusion in contradistinction to thrombotic obstruction.
These symptoms usually subside in a day or two, or with the swelling caused by the reaction.
If the symptoms appear at once after the injection, it is best to force out as much of the injected mass as is possible through the needle hole through which it has been introduced.
Fig. 298a.Fig. 298b.Anterior, Superior and Inferior Third Nasal Deficiency and Correction Thereof.
Fig. 298a.Fig. 298b.Anterior, Superior and Inferior Third Nasal Deficiency and Correction Thereof.
Fig. 298a.Fig. 298b.
Anterior, Superior and Inferior Third Nasal Deficiency and Correction Thereof.
The author was called to attend a case several hours after the operator had injected a nose. The acute symptoms pointed to a direct occlusion of the vessels, yet the surgeon who had performed the operation assured me he had not injected until he found that blood did not flow from the needle after its insertion. To relieve the patient of immediate fright and some pain, a dull pointed needle of larger caliber than the one used in operation was pushed through the needle wound previously made, taking the place of a cannula, and a greater part of the injected mass was squeezed out. Ice cloth applications were followed through the night and the nose recovered in three days without showing the discoloration of the skin usually observed following such cases. The nose was never injected again, on account of the dread of the patient, but peculiarly the anterior line showed almost a normal contour after four weeks had elapsed. This only goes to prove that very much less of the mass to be injected is required than is commonly supposed by operators.
Total Anterior Deficiency.—In this condition there is a scooped-out or general curved-in appearance of the entire anterior nasal line. The lobule of the nose is usually normal in size.
This defect should be corrected by two injections of the paraffin compound previously referred to. The points of injection should be lateral and anterior to the angular vessel on the side of the nose preferred by the operator—one about the center or major curvature and the other about the inferior third.
Care should be taken to mold the injected mass as narrow as possible, or as much as the skin will permit. If the latter is bound down it should be mobilized by subcutaneous dissection or levation. A subsequent injection should not be undertaken until the entire mass has become settled or fairly organized, which is about the end of three weeks.
The mass should be injected well up to the root of the nose to give it the appearance of the normal bridge. If this is found impossible owing to a dividing skin attachment, a third needle puncture should be made at a point on a level with the internal canthus.
Fig. 299.Fig. 300.Anterior Total Nasal Deficiency and Correction Thereof.
Fig. 299.Fig. 300.Anterior Total Nasal Deficiency and Correction Thereof.
Fig. 299.Fig. 300.
Anterior Total Nasal Deficiency and Correction Thereof.
Care must be exercised to keep the mass from creeping into the loose tissue about the internal canthi by having an assistant press the sides of the nose at that point with the thumb and forefinger.
This undesirable condition is much more liable to occur when a hot liquid paraffin is employed, since the operator can observe quite accurately the extent and direction taken by the mass injected when the cold product is used.
Some authorities have injected noses of this type from the point of the nose, but it will be found that the position of the puncture at this point allows a considerable portion of the mass to work out during molding and also to permit of the readier oozing out of the mass during the pressure exerted by what reactive inflammation follows the operation. This is accounted for by the fact that the needle creates a tubelike canal in the tightly bound down tissue overlying the lower lateral cartilages, whereas in the lateral punctures the short canal is easily displaced by the swelling, thus causing its obliteration and preventing the free oozing.
On the other hand, it will be found to be more difficult to inject from the point of the nose alone and that a very long needle has to be used which must be withdrawn as the parts above the point are filled. Furthermore, it will be found necessary to thrust the point of the needle in different directions to overcome vertical attachments of the skin which are more readily lifted up than thrust aside by the mass, hence necessitating a greater amount of injury to the tissues, not to speak of the possibility of injecting transverse blood vessels higher up in the nose of which the operator would not be aware at the time; showing only in the resultant phlebitis and unexpected reactive symptoms, associated with a discoloration more or less lasting according to the extent of obliteration of the vessels.
The post-operative treatment should be as heretofore advised.
Lateral Insufficiency(Unilateral and Bilateral).—Depressions about the sides of the nose are usually due to hereditary causes, when they are likely to be bilateral, yet intranasal ulcerations may cause a falling-in, as it were, of either one or both nasal walls, involving in such instances the entire side or part of it. In the partial cases the depression may be in any of the division of thirds used by the author—that is, it may lie laterally over the region of the nasal bone and such of the nasal process of the superior maxillary bone as goes to make up that part of the nose, or in the middle third below the bone structure and above the superior limitation of the lower lateral cartilages, or within the lower third over the inferior border of the cellular tissue making up the nasal rim.
Traumatism may be found to be the cause of such depressions, especially in the middle third, after fracture or luxation of the nose. In such cases the defect is usually unilateral or at the seat of the former injury, a convexity usually being exhibited on the opposite side.
Since the skin is rather firmly adherent at the sides of the nose, except in the major part of the superior third, it will be found best to raise the skin of such defect into normal contour by a series of very small injections instead of following the method heretofore advised in connection with tense or adherent areas of skin, for the reason that such dissection would render the skin too mobile over an area usually beyond the defect itself and inviting the surgeon to an annoying hyperinjection which renders the part more unsightly than prior to the operation. This is true in most cases unless the depression is of traumatic origin and beyond the size of deformity usually corrected.
The author advocates the employment of a hypodermic needle attached to the syringe in place of the regular needle and that the injection be of sterile white vaselin without additions of any kind.
Such injections may be made very readily, one or more at the first sitting, being introduced below the deepest part of the defect. It is surprising how much four or five drops of such an injection will accomplish. Furthermore, it is to be remembered that the injections about the side of the nose are readily replaced by new connective tissue, equal to, if not commonly greater in amount, than the mass injected, such growth being completed in about two months after the time of injection. This may be explained by a more or less active perichondritis when the injection is made over the cartilage, the inflammation, thus set up, being of longer duration than where the skin and bone or areolar tissue are involved. Any subsequent injection should not be undertaken until at the end of two weeks or more for the reasons above stated.
The injected mass at all times should be introduced under normal pressure, never to the extent of rendering the skin above it white in color. The mass should also be molded out with the tip of the finger or the rounded, dull handle end of a scalpel. If necessary, the small finger may be introduced into the nostril to facilitate this molding. Should the reactive inflammation be severe such remedial agents as have been referred to should be used to reduce it.
Phlebitis following injections at the side of the nose is due entirely to the injection of a blood vessel and must be avoided. When a fine needle is used there is less likelihood of free bleeding from an injured vessel, therefore a thorough knowledge of the usual position of the vessels about the sides of the nose is absolutely essential. Bleeding of greater extent than that which would follow the thrust of the needle through the skin should put the surgeon on his guard. Experience is the better teacher and conservatism in these ofttimes delicate, subcutaneous operations will save the surgeon much annoyance and eventually the need of having the patientsubmit to a cutting operation to reduce an overcorrected area.
Should a hyperplasia of connective tissue result from such an operation, a small linear incision, under four per cent eucain anesthesia, should be made directly over the greatest prominence, through which the offending mass can be removed by the aid of a small hooked knife or a fine pair of curved scissors.
The mass should be removed beyond the plane of the skin; in fact, it should be rather removed in conelike form, apex inward, and the peripheral attachment completely obliterated, in order to obtain the desired result, as it is not unusual to have the prominence reappear after imperfect extirpation and improper dissection.
Moist pressure dressings may be applied over the small wound thus made, for several days, or until the inflammation following the operation has subsided. Suturing such a wound is hardly necessary, but if the incision be over one fourth of an inch long, two fine silk sutures, deeply placed, may be utilized, their tension adding to the compression needed to bring the mobilized skin into position in reference to the base of the wound.
The author has used contractile collodion in place of compress dressings with very good result. This should be renewed within forty-eight hours.
After eight or ten days silk isinglass adhesive plaster is applied over the wound until it falls off.
Lobular Insufficiency.—This defect of the nose is usually of hereditary origin, although it may be occasioned by the retraction of the inferior half of the organ in tubercular or syphilitic ulceration in which the lobule falls inward and upward by the loss of the retaining cartilages.
Owing to the close adhesion of the skin to the lower lateral cartilages and the cellular tissue about the rim of the alæ it is found difficult to restore the contour or elongate the organ at that site by subcutaneous injection.
Even after thorough mobilization of the integumentthe subsequent injected mass is liable to be thrown off by an overactive inflammatory reaction, due undoubtedly to the adhesions formed between the divided surfaces from the periphery inward which has a tendency to crowd the injected mass forward and downward before a new connective tissue has had time to be formed, causing a breaking down of the skin at some point overlying the mass and allowing it to escape.
The author has attempted to replace the injection by small solid paraffin plates introduced through a small lateral incision made for the subcutaneous dissection, and while the wound healed readily enough and the nose appeared normal, the plates were in every case thrown off by a later inflammatory process before the end of the third week.
The author then attempted to replace the solid plates with granular paraffin, gently packing the latter into the wound until the desired elevation had been obtained with the idea that such mass would accommodate itself much better under the pressure caused by reactive inflammation, but even this procedure proved unsuccessful.
The best results are obtained with sterilized white vaselin injections when there is considerable mobility of the skin. A single needle opening should be made, preferably about the center of the side of the lobule, or slightly anterior to this point, carrying the point of the needle forward to the anterior median line and a little above the actual point of the nose.
The injection should be made slowly, closely watching the size of the elevation caused by the mass and the state of the circulation about the entire lobule.
Usually ten drops of the mass suffice to give the desired result. The mass may be molded out if found desirable, but if the skin appears normal after the operation and the tumefaction thus made does not make the nose look grotesque, it may be allowed to remain as injected, depending upon the subsequent reactive pressureto force it into shape. In this way a greater part of the mass is retained at the wanted site and is not crowded to the sides of the lobule by the customary post-operative molding.
Even with this method great care must be exercised in not injecting too much at each sitting. A failure is sure to result in hyperinjection about the lobule. When it be remembered that only a very small quantity of the mass will make a decided difference, the surgeon and patient should be satisfied with the slightest gain.
If, however, the mass be retained and further elongation of the lobule is desired, a subsequent injection can be undertaken, but not until a full month after the primary operation.
Here, as with lateral nasal injections, there seems to be an overproduction of new connective tissue following such an injection; a decided factor in eventually pleasing the patient.
It is needless to say that the operator must avoid injecting one of the blood vessels of the lobule, as this will cause considerable inflammation from which the lobule does not recover readily, owing to the dense tissue the surgeon has to deal with, leaving the tip of the nose discolored and bluish for some time after the operation.
If the injected mass causes an immediate venous stasis of the lobule, hot applications should be applied at once, or as soon as the operator discovers that the proper massage and pressure to remove the offending mass does not improve the circulation.
The author advocates the judicious use of antiphlogistin, faithfully applied hot every six hours and continued until the acute inflammatory symptoms subside, when the surgeon may resort to ice cloths or cold pack until the danger of pressure and resultant gangrene have subsided.
Despite the very grave symptoms associated with such inflammation, the operator may assure the patient againstpermanent disfigurement, although the three or four weeks’ duration of treatment, usually required in such cases, is an ordeal the cosmetic surgeon and the patient are not liable to forget.
If the injected mass causing this state of affairs has been of liquid paraffin, the better method to pursue is to make several small incisions into the site of the injections and remove the little masses of solid paraffin as far as possible with the view of relieving the pressure or encroachment, at the same time alleviating the pain and stasis by the resultant depletion. Moist, hot applications should follow this procedure. The small wounds made in the skin will heal without suture, leaving hardly any perceptible scar.
The author, however, advises against any mixture or liquid paraffin injections about the lobule, never having seen a satisfactory result when either had been employed.
The post-operative treatment in uncomplicated cases may be of aristol and adhesive isinglass plaster or collodion.
Interlobular Deficiency.—This condition is hereditary in the great majority of cases. The defect, while quite disfiguring, giving the appearance of a cleft nasal point, is easily corrected by the subcutaneous injection method.
Paraffins of high melting points should, however, never be employed for this purpose for diverse reasons: first, the hardening of the mass after cooling causes too much pressure upon the small blood vessels at the point of the nose and results in more or less permanent discoloration of the tip; second, by reason of the pressure of a hard mass, at the end of the nose, considerable inflammation results which usually terminates in the evacuation of the entire mass and consequent cicatrization; third, by virtue of the greater irritating qualities of paraffin a greater amount of new connective tissue than necessary is thrown out, causing a general and hyperplastic rounding of the entire tip of the nose that requiressurgical interference to overcome. In the illustration shown the patient’s nose was injected along the entire anterior line and the lobule with paraffin liquefied under heat. A marked post-operative inflammation resulted, with permanent redness of the entire organ and several decisive capillaries showing about the sides and tip of the nose. This was followed in about six weeks by a progressive hyperplasia which left the nose about three times its natural size, and the lobule a hard, ball-like knob of high red color. Several cosmetic operations were required to make the nose appear anywhere near normal, while the electrolytic needling process was resorted to for a number of sittings to destroy the acute redness and the individual vessels showing.
Fig. 301.—Untoward Effect of Paraffin Injection about Lobule and Anterior Nasal Line.Scar lines on nose indicate the various attempts made to reduce the resultant hyperplasia.
Fig. 301.—Untoward Effect of Paraffin Injection about Lobule and Anterior Nasal Line.Scar lines on nose indicate the various attempts made to reduce the resultant hyperplasia.
Fig. 301.—Untoward Effect of Paraffin Injection about Lobule and Anterior Nasal Line.Scar lines on nose indicate the various attempts made to reduce the resultant hyperplasia.
While a great many workers with paraffin deny any beneficial results from the employment of sterile white vaselin for subcutaneous injections, the author claims that in this particular class of deformity it is almost exclusively required.
The vaselin in cold state should be injected directly under the skin overlying the deepest point of the cleft and be slowly continued until the lobule assumes its normal contour. The puncture may be made below the point of the nose.
One such injection usually suffices to correct the fault. The reactive symptoms are not severe if proper technic has been applied, and cold compresses usually relieve it within twenty-four hours.
Should the skin be adherent about the anterior aspect of the lower lateral cartilages, it can be forced away with a small, dull, round-pointed knife resembling an eye spud, the opening for which need not necessarily be greater than that made for the needle. The latter is inserted through the same opening, which must be closed over in this event with a drop of contractile collodion into which aristol is introduced with the pulverflator, which not only embodies an antiseptic, but at the same time hastens its hardening.
Alar Deficiency(Unilateral and Bilateral).—The contraction about the nasal rims may be due to hereditary causes or the result of intranasal disease. The defect is usually bilateral, involving the entire alæ or only their lower half or third.
The fault should be corrected by several injections made along the rim of the nasal wing, using a fine needle, preferably of the hypodermic size. Vaselin only should be used and two or three drops, according to the extent of the deformity, be injected into the cellular tissue at the point of each needle insertion.
Three of such punctures may be made along the rim, one beyond the other in each wing. According to thedefect the injection may be carried higher or lower above the margin of the rim by shoving the needle upward and toward the inferior border of the lower lateral cartilage.
The reaction in these cases is very little, rarely necessitating other than an antiseptic powder-plaster dressing. Subsequent injections should be made if the first do not give the desired contour; but never until the surgeon is satisfied that the resultant new connective tissue thrown out has reached its ultimate growth.
The harder paraffins, especially those injected in the liquefied state, are not to be tolerated for the reasons given with the preceding method of correction.
Subseptal Deficiency(Partial and Complete).—It is not uncommon to find a marked concavity of the subseptum in noses that have sunken in by reason of intranasal disease or traumatism.
This concavity, when partial, is usually most marked near the lobule, but in the complete variety the upward curve may be greatest near its juncture with the lip.
Owing to the usual adhesions formed during the inflammatory period causing the deformity the correction of this defect is quite difficult. As a rule, the skin of the entire subseptum needs to be dissected away from the underlying structure before it will permit of correction by the injection method.
This dissection is advocated and can be readily done from one of the nostrils at a point just beyond the union of skin and mucous membrane.
The dissection under such method can be made more thoroughly than when done exteriorly, for the reason that the entire field is laid open to a free use of the scalpel, leaving no visible cicatrix externally. The dissection may be followed by the immediate injection of the mixture of paraffin and vaselin, as already referred to, used cold, or the area is injected with normal salt solution until the intranasal wound has healed, which usually takes place in about five days. The mucous membranein such instance may be neatly but not too tightly sutured with No. 1 silk. If the operator deems it advisable he may inject the salt solution again on the third day to prevent the formation of such adhesions as may interfere with the ultimate hydrocarbon injection. This is rarely found necessary.
If the post-operative inflammation prove mild, then the adhesions will not be as tenacious, in which case the surgeon may wait until even the seventh or eighth day before injecting the paraffin compound, to be sure of not forcing the intranasal wound apart under the pressure of the mass injected.
Never should so large a quantity of the mass be injected as to cause blanching of the narrow strip of skin. This is sure to result in gangrene of some, if not all, of the skin of the subseptum—a result much to be regretted, since subsequent correction of the deformity increased by the contraction of the dermal cicatrix is rendered well-nigh impossible by reason of this very tissue.
Hard paraffin injected in its molten state is never borne in this part of the human economy. It is usually thrown off after a few days of very painful and highly inflammatory symptoms, undoubtedly explained by the fact that the circulation of the subseptum is principally dependent upon the delicate branches of the two small septal arteries of the superior coronary and a hard, ungiving mass would readily cause their obliteration.
Labial Deficiency(Upper and Lower Lip).—There are a number of causes creating deficiencies about the labial orifice. The same causes apply naturally to both lips, whether the defect be unilateral, bilateral, or median. Some of these deformities are more often met with than others, as, for instance, a median deficiency of the upper lip following cicatricial contraction due to a harelip operationdone early in life; in elderly patients a partial paralysis is found to affect one half the upper and sometimes a part of the lower lip, giving to the mouth a drooped and grinning appearance.
Other causes are dental defects, abnormalities of the alveolar processes, traumatism, and disease.
In those conditions where loss of tissue is responsible for the defect, as in the extirpation of neoplasms, ulcerative disease, etc., it is quite likely that cheiloplasty is required to rebuild the parts, but in many of these cases splendid results may be obtained by the judicious use of hydrocarbon protheses to overcome the usual post-operative oral distortion. It is understood that such injections should not be undertaken until the wounds are thoroughly healed and the cicatricial union fully contracted. This is true also in harelip operations undertaken later in life.
The correction of labial defects coming under this method is not at all difficult, but artistic skill and judgment are as necessary as the surgical technic.
The lips are plentifully supplied with blood vessels, and therefore greater care in injecting a foreign mass into their structure is necessary; furthermore, the lips cannot be placed at rest for any long period of time, so that the mass injected can never be expected to be kept in place if of a consistency hard enough to permit the contraction of the orbicularis muscle to move it about.
From the very fact of this practically constant movement of a part it is self-evident such hard mass could not be retained or held in position for any length of time, unless the mass is small enough not to be affected by the movement, and under such condition the correction of a defect as desired by the patient would require perhaps months to accomplish, owing to the very fact that only droplike masses may be deposited under the skin in perhaps a half dozen places with the necessity of a long period of rest until the injections have been replaced bythe new tissue before the next operation could be undertaken.
It is absolutely absurd to think of injecting a lip with hard paraffin liquefied by heat and expect to obtain a satisfactory result. While it is true the mass is moldable immediately after its introduction, so that a desired shape may be obtained, it does not overcome the fact, however, that the mass must harden, as it will, and that, while a part of it is broken away, as it were, from the mass proper, there is a nuclear contraction as the hardening takes place, thus overcoming partly the molded form; furthermore, the movement of the parts here tends to displace the mass. Unequal muscular contraction breaks up not only the form but also the mass itself, during all of which time it is made to act as an irritant by virtue of the movement of the uneven edges of the paraffin upon the adjacent tissue.
Furthermore, the presence of paraffin and the resultant mass of new and hard connective tissue, so well recognized by all experienced surgeons, is not desirable in the lip structure; it makes the lip appear bulky and hard and anything but natural.
It is in these very cases that the injections of cold sterile white vaselin is indicated. After injection the mass may be evenly and satisfactorily molded out, the mass being soft and readily pressed into shape in the various cells of areolar tissue without leaving hard and uneven lumps.
The movement of the lip is not then a source of danger in displacing the mass, since the acute swelling of the lip tissue prevents its free movement for several days, which gives the injected mass an opportunity to establish itself and find its proper place.
Another advantage in using this preparation subcutaneously is that it is less irritating than hard paraffin, permits freer movement, and creates a better production of new connective tissue.
While a part of the mass may be absorbed during the replacement period the lip retains its normal consistency, and if the desired contour has not been attained a subsequent injection may be made in three weeks’ time without interfering in any way with the former result.
The only precaution, aside from avoiding the injection of blood vessels, is to keep the injection from the prolabium or vermilion border. The latter tissue is very prone to fatty degeneration or to yellowish discolorations when such a foreign mass has been introduced into or near its structure.
There is no objection in injecting the lip, upper or lower, in several places, as the cellular network about the mouth is sufficiently dense to prevent the escape of the vaselin injected from the adjacent opening if the distance is not less than a half inch between the punctures.
The injections may be made from above downward in the upper lip and, vice versa, in the lower. They should be begun at the outer angle working toward the median line.
The reaction following such an injection is usually more severe than in any other tissue of the face, owing to the great number of fine blood vessels, but the swelling is readily controlled in two or three days by cold applications.
Aristol collodion dressings over each wound suffice to close the punctures.
In the median variety of defect, where a cicatricial band separates the lip into halves, it may be found necessary to do a subcutaneous dissection before a suitable injection can be done, but in cases of long standing the dividing wall is exceedingly thin and the threadlike adhesions below are quite easily broken up by the force of the injection. The later product of new connective tissue will tend to further improve the contour.
Nasolabial Furrows(Unilateral and Bilateral).—This condition in the bilateral form is exceedingly common inadults beyond middle age. It is also found in those individuals suffering from inanition, due to whatever cause. The unilateral form is found principally in patients suffering from semifacial paralysis in which the tissue lacking the proper neurotic supply droops or sags down, causing a deep furrow to appear from the attachment of the alæ to the angle of the mouth, associated more or less by a flattening of the cheek contour of that side of the face.
The method of correction advocated by the author varies entirely from the technic advanced by other surgeons.
The usual method has been to introduce the needle of the syringe at the outer or lower extremity of the furrow and from one of such punctures to inject the whole line of depression.
While this seems right theoretically the method does not give the desired result. Owing to the free movement of the upper lip the mass, at first neatly restoring the contour, is crowded upward into the inferior malar region and very often downward toward the angle of the mouth, where it settles in a hard lump which is not only obnoxious to the sight but interferes with the proper use of the parts concerned in mastication and vocalization. Invariably the operator is called upon to remove the disfigurement.
It can be readily understood that hard paraffin itself, in such case, would prove more objectionable than a softer mass which, upon early discovery, could be molded or massaged into better position, while nothing less than excision would prove efficacious with paraffin.
As with the lip, then, the author advocates the use of either the cold mixture of paraffin, as heretofore described, or the cold white vaselin according to the operator’s opinion in overcoming the extent of the fault. For all ordinary cases white vaselin alone is necessary.
The technic of injection as used by the author is as follows: In the ordinary case when the furrow is not too pronounced one sitting only is required. Two needle punctures are made above the upper line of the defect, the first being made about one half inch from the wing of the nose and the other about one inch outward and downward.
The needle is pushed downward under the skin until its opening corresponds to the median line or deepest part of the furrow. Enough cold white vaselin is injected to bring the depressed area slightly above the plane of the skin of the upper lip. The second puncture is made perpendicular to the first and the injection made in the same manner.
With the tip of the indicis over the first needle opening the mass is molded out evenly by a gentle rocking or rubbing movement. The same is done with the second mass.
It will be found, then, that the two masses are made to meet at about the center of the furrow, leaving a slight wall of tissue between them. This wall has the virtue of preventing the falling down of the upper mass, at the same time dividing the quantity of the injected mass into two, and lessening the weight.
If the condition is bilateral both sides are operated on at the same sitting. If subsequent injections are needed they are done three weeks later, the punctures being made between the former first and second punctures and the second and outer border of the furrow. In this way the entire site is filled with a series of injections.
If the surgeon desires he may increase the number of these needle punctures at the first sitting, making them nearer together in that event.
It will be found necessary in some cases to inject the cold mixture of vaselin and paraffin into the furrow directly below the wing of the nose, since the integumentat that point requires a mass somewhat harder than vaselin to force and hold it up.
The rest of the furrow must, however, be injected with vaselin alone, for the reasons already given in parts that are movable.
The reaction is rarely very marked and subsides in about three days.
Gentle massage may be permitted above the site of injection to keep the mass from crawling into the cheek. This is done by gently stroking the skin from below upward toward the nose on a line an inch above the original depression.
The dressings are the same as before mentioned, although collodion painted over the needle openings is most serviceable after having sponged off the sites with absorbent cotton dipped into absolute alcohol to remove the vaselin that may have exuded from the openings during the molding-out process.
Oral-Angular Furrow.—These furrows occur at the corners of the mouth, running downward upon the anterior chin. Small as these defects appear, they are found difficult of obliteration, for the reason that the tissues are more or less under constant movement during the waking hours. Repeated injections, each of small quantity, are necessary. Hard paraffin is contra-indicated.
The injections are made from above the defect downward at right angles to the defect.
It will be found difficult to keep the mass from being expelled on account of the movement, there being more or less oozing from the puncture, but if the openings can be controlled for at least twenty-four hours this danger may be overcome to a great extent.
Ethyl chlorid may be sprayed over the part immediately the needle is withdrawn to set the mass and followed with a drop of collodion. The patient is advised to keep the mouth as immovable as possible for the rest of the day.
The reaction is never severe, and is easily controlled by cold applications. If, after one week, there is shown a tendency to sagging of the mass, it should be gently massaged upward with the finger several times during the day for at least two weeks; this will keep it in place, and allow nature to replace it with new connective tissue when desired.
Deficiency of Cheek(Total and Partial).—A total lack of proper contour of the cheek, generally termed flattening, may be due to hereditary causes, but is generally dependent upon a cachexia due to a general disease, or fatty degeneration of the muscular structure of the cheeks, as found in those beyond middle age.
A partial deficiency of the cheek or cheeks is usually hereditary, but may be dependent upon digestive disorders or other causes of malnutrition.
This class of deformity is found more often in women than men. It is usually bilateral.
Unilateral cheek deficiency, whether partial or total, may be congenital, but is often the result of a local paralysis causing hemiatrophy. Traumatisms early in life or during birth and amputation of the inferior maxillary are other causes.
This class of deformity is quite readily corrected by subcutaneous injection; in fact, it is the only known method of merit, superseding the former resort to partial correction by massage or artificial and temporary correction by the wearing of plumpers in the buccal cavity.
The method of procedure is the same in all cases, the number of injections and quantity varying, of course, with the extent of the defect.
As with the rebuilding of the contour of the lips so with the cheeks, which must of necessity be mobile and flexible, the injection of hard paraffin is out of the question. The author has observed a number of such cases,and is free to say that in each case the result was not only abnormal in appearance, but a source of great annoyance to the patient.
What is worse is that the paraffin once injected can never be removed except in places where an actual encystment has taken place, in which case the hard mass may be removed through a small incision made directly over the mass and introducing a grooved director into the opening then by the rotation, or to-and-fro movement of which, combined with digital pressure, the cyst is evacuated. Once the mass is replaced by a network of connective tissue it could not be removed except by an extensive dissection and extirpation, which leaves behind it cicatrices far worse than the appearance of the parts before operation.
The author injects cold sterile white vaselin below the skin here and there about the cheek at the sites of deepest deficiency.
These injections may be made under ethyl-chlorid anesthesia.
Each injection is carried to the extent of causing a lump below the skin, the quantity being judged from a thorough experience with similar cases.
After the injections have all been done, the thumb of the right hand is passed into the mouth against the buccal mucous membrane of the left cheek and the index finger over it externally or on the skin surface. For the right cheek the index finger instead of the thumb is placed in the mouth. The mass or lumps are now gently pressed into the desired shape and thickness by the aid of these two fingers. A few drops of the mass may be forced out of the needle holes under this procedure, but this is of no consequence when it is considered that from one to two ounces may have been injected into each cheek.
This gliding form of massage should be continued until the entire cheek presents an even and rounded-out appearance.
It will be found, in the majority of cases, that the integument of the cheeks about the region of the inferior border of the zygomatic process is rather firmly adherent, and that a subsequent injection will be necessary to elevate the cheek at that point.
Injections over the malar bone are prone to cause severe reaction, leaving a puffed appearance just below the eyelids. This may be more or less permanent and is very undesirable. It should be avoided by injecting very small quantities at that site. It is always safer to add a little subsequently.
The reaction, generally, is not severe, and is readily controlled by cold applications, yet the author has experienced considerable swelling and tenderness in two cases of total cheek deficiency corrections which lasted for several weeks after the operation, giving excellent result eventually, however. Such symptoms are dependent upon circulatory interference, but resolution should take place without untoward results with judicious treatment, unless the operator has been negligent by injecting one or more blood vessels, in which case the resultant thrombosis may cause breaking down of the subcutaneous tissue, abscess, evacuation of the mass, and possibly death in part of the integument. The precautions referred to in avoiding any such possibility have been fully given heretofore.
Never should the operator hyperinject the cheeks, even if the patient insists upon looking like a puffed ball. He should be satisfied with a normal contour, and truthfully assure the patient such hyperinjected contour could not be retained owing to the weight and dropping down of the mass before nature could properly replace it by organized tissue.
Subsequent injections may be made about three weeks after the first sitting.
With nervous and hypercritical patients the surgeon may elect to give the patient a number of sittings, injectingonly small quantities at two or three places each time. This in the majority of cases will give better results than when an entire cheek is injected, for the reason that the larger mass is likely to be displaced by the unconscious act of the patient in sleeping on one or both of the rebuilt cheeks or the willful massage to improve the handiwork of the surgeon in their own belief.
Massage of the cheeks after the replacement period is not to be tolerated. It tends to create hyperplasia by circulatory stimulation.
It is not unusual to have the patient tell you that for weeks after the replacement period the cheeks are swollen considerably in the morning upon arising, going down gradually during the day.
This is due to the spongy or loose character of the new tissue caused to be formed by the foreign mass, which gradually takes on a harder and more compact form.
The post-operative dressing will be either adhesive isinglass plaster or collodion. With the former, moist applications during the stage of reaction are not permissible.
Deficiency of Lid Contour(Upper and Lower Lids—Unilateral and Bilateral).—The lack of contour in the eyelids is not as frequently met with as redundancy of their integumentary structure; there are cases, however, where the eyes seem to lie deep in their sockets, owing to a sinking in or a collapse of the surrounding lids.
This condition is often found to be hereditary, in other cases it is the result of malnutrition, a peculiar lack of adipose tissue about the orbit for no known reason, or fatty degeneration in past middle life.
The fault is usually bilateral. In rare instances trauma about the orbital borders may result in lack of nutrition. Such cases are usually unilateral, and the upper lid is affected in the majority of cases.
The correction of these defects is found to be rather difficult, owing to the thickness of the tissue under consideration.
The use of hard paraffin plays havoc with eyelid tissue, rendering it hard, immobile, and causing a hyperplasia of the new connective tissue formed thereby, as well as the peculiar yellowish pigmentary spots of irregular form resembling on casual inspection xanthalasma. This discoloration has been fully described earlier in the work.
The author has had occasion to remove these hard irregular masses investing the lower lid in several cases where paraffin had been injected, also two cases in which the pigmentary discoloration involved both upper and lower lids associated with the same hard fibrous masses. Excision under local anesthesia and silk suture was the method of correction employed.
From an experience of twenty-two cases the author believes these conditions most amenable for correction by the injection of sterile oils in preference to any other substance. Even white vaselin does not here seem to answer the purpose, owing to its stimulating property of causing the resultant growth of connective tissue.
While vaselin injected in the lids causes less of this new tissue to be formed, such tissue is never of the consistency required. This is especially true of the upper lids.
The oil injected, sterilized sperm oil being employed by the writer, is prone to absorption of more or less degree, but the result is gratifying, and lasts from six months to one year, leaving no untoward effect.
If the absorption has been sufficient to leave the parts as before the operation, a subsequent injection of the same character may be undertaken six months from the time of the first or even later, as the patient may choose.
The tissue of the eyelid is prone to swell immediately the oil is injected, and this swelling is entirely out ofproportion to the quantity introduced. This edema, due to a retardation by pressure of the blood supply, is very misleading, the operator believing the parts overinjected. A screw-drop syringe is therefore absolutely required.
A fine hypodermic needle is used, and after a few drops of the foreign matter have been injected, the lid should be massaged gently with the tip of the indicis, employing the circular movement.
The injection should be made at the outer end of the lid about one fourth inch above or below the canthus for upper or lower lid respectively.
The needle, slightly dulled, should be long enough to reach the full length of the part to be injected. Its course can be readily seen under the thin, overlying skin.
As the injection progresses slowly and evenly the needle is withdrawn.
A second puncture or injection should not be made at one sitting; if the parts are underinjected the operation is repeated as soon as the swelling of the lid has subsided, which is about the end of the fourth or fifth day.
The reaction, apart from the edema, is very little, although there may be more or less discoloration of the parts, as the result of the obstruction offered the blood vessels.
This is always an alarming symptom to the patient, but passes away completely in the usual manner in several days.
The post-operative dressings may be collodion or silk protective.
Cold or hot applications, as may be best borne by the patient, can be used; they tend to reduce the puffing and lessen the ecchymosis. The patient should be instructed to lie with the head higher than usual for the first two nights to retard the edema.
Furrow about Canthus(Unilateral and Bilateral).—This condition is commonly called “Crow’s Feet,” and is, in the majority of cases, due to advancing age, but is acquiredby habitually contracting the eyelids, as in laughing or grimacing. It is particularly noticeable in persons employed in the drama.
The defect is usually bilateral, but may exist at one side only in rare cases.
The correction is easily accomplished by this method of subcutaneous injection, although a reduction of the furrow alone does not suffice, leaving a lump or elevation at the site. The author shades off the injection, as it were, making the site somewhat conelike, the apex being at the canthus and the base outward toward the hair line of the temporal region.
Sterile oil should be injected near the canthus, where the overlying integument is delicate. One such injection, covering an area of the diameter of half to three fourths of an inch, should be made, and thus backed up or built outward with two or three injections of the white vaselin, as described under temporal muscular deficiency.
The hypodermic needle should be used near the canthus, and the regular one over or about the temple.
The reaction near the canthus is similar to that with lid injections. The same post-operative treatment as with the lids should be employed.
Deficiency of the Ocular Stump.—It frequently happens that by reason of extensive inflammatory disease and adjacent adhesions of the eye, a greater part of the globe must be excised than in the usual case, whether the operation be an ordinary excision, the Mules’s evisceration or the Frost modification of the latter.
In such event the granular button or the stump made of Tenon’s capsule is too small to permit of the placing and retention of the artificial eye. In other instances the stump is so contracted that while the artificial eye is retained it must of necessity be allowed to rest deep in the socket, destroying the entire contour of the orbit. Again in the enucleation operation so little of Tenon’s capsule engages the artificial eye that movement is entirelydestroyed, particularly when the Mules’s glass globe has not been introduced.
Excellent results may be obtained in some of these cases, others are not amenable to the injection method because of a lack of sufficient stump to inject, and the danger of injecting through the posterior wall of the capsule, the mass in part escaping into the orbital apex, where it is liable to impinge sufficiently upon the remains of the optic nerve to cause sympathetic inflammation of the normal eye. A condition at once not easily corrected, proving dangerous to the sight of the healthy eye, and possibly producing a fatal termination.
It is with the use of paraffin, liquefied by heat and injected in this state, that such fatal cases as have been placed on record have been operated. The liquid mass under pressure forced into a soft pultaceous mass cannot be easily controlled, if at all, and accidents here are of more serious import than in any other part of the human anatomy, apart from the direct injection of a facial artery of sufficient size to produce an alarming embolism and death.
The author cannot speak too forcibly against such irrational procedure. Other surgeons are beginning to realize the danger of the use of hard paraffin injections near the eye.
The proper and safe method of improving the stump is to introduce into it, under local eucain or cocain anesthesia, small masses of the mixture of vaselin and paraffin in cold state. These injections into the stump and mucous membrane should be done several weeks apart, always keeping a respectful distance from the remains of the optic nerve.
The injections should be begun as near to the surface as possible without breaking down the tissue by necrosis, keeping in mind that one or two of such successfully introduced masses will do much toward supporting the artificial eye.