Introduction:
Endoscopic
sinus surgery has its own attendent complications. Intraoperative
complications include bleeding, CSF leak, and periorbital damage.
There are also short term complications which include infections,
synechiae formation and lateralization of middle turbinate.
Intraoperative complications can largely be avoided by scrupulously
following meticulous surgical technique and precise anatomical
knowledge.
Centripetal
FESS technique:
Vertical
incision is made in the nasal mucosa close to the anterior margin of
the uncinate process. If the uncinate process is not clearly visible
due to the presence of polypoidal changes the incision can be sited
close to the posterior margin of agger nasi. The medial wall of the
orbit is identified at the earliest and the dissection proceeds in
the postero superior direction to the floor of the anterior cranial
fossa (roof of the ethmoid) which should be identified in all cases.
Dissection always proceeds in a direction parallel to the lamina
papyracea. The bulla ethmoidalis is sectioned away from its
attachment to the lamina papyracea using a scissors. It should be
sectioned in a plane parallel to lamina papyracea. This dissection
proceeds till the anterior wall of sphenoid sinus is reached. If
need be the anterior wall of sphenoid sinus can be opened. The
surgical plane formed by the junction of lamina papyracea as it joins
the lateral wall of sphenoid sinus. If this plane is adhered to then
damage to vital structures can be avoided.
If surgery
is not contemplated in the frontal outflow tract then the superior
portion of the uncinate process is left undisturbed.
This
centripetal technique of ethmoidectomy begins at the periphery and
progresses towards the centre.
Advantages of
centripetal resection:
- It provides wide exposure
- It provides excellent hemostasis
- This provides adequate lateral margins
- Since the plane is dissection proceeds along the floor of anterior cranial fossa keeping medial to the medial wall of orbit, the surgeon need not bother about the variations in the ethmoidal lamella.
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