Publications by authors named "Jan-Falco Wilbrand"

Necrotizing fasciitis of the head and neck is a rare, very severe disease, which, in most cases, originates from odontogenic infections and frequently ends with the death of the patient. Rapid surgical intervention in combination with a preferably pathogen-specific antibiotic therapy can ensure patients' survival. The question arises concerning which pathogens are causative for the necrotizing course of odontogenic inflammations.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Odontogenic abscesses are primarily caused by oral bacteria, but traditional culture methods often fail to accurately identify these pathogens due to their complex nature and growth requirements.
  • - A study using 16S rRNA gene analysis and next-generation sequencing found that all tested patients with severe infections had identifiable pus microbiomes, revealing higher bacterial diversity compared to standard culture methods.
  • - This molecular approach showed that most infections were polymicrobial and predominantly anaerobic, suggesting that using advanced diagnostic techniques could greatly improve the detection and treatment of these infections in clinical settings.
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Craniofacial anomaly including deformational plagiocephaly as a result of deformities in head and facial bones evolution is a serious health problem in newbies. The impact of such condition on the affected infants is profound from both medical and social viewpoint. Indeed, timely diagnosing through different medical examinations like anthropometric measurements of the skull or even Computer Tomography (CT) image modality followed by a periodical screening and monitoring plays a vital role in treatment phase.

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Severe odontogenic abscesses are regularly caused by bacteria of the physiological oral microbiome. However, the culture of these bacteria is often prone to errors and sometimes does not result in any bacterial growth. Furthermore, various authors found completely different bacterial spectra in odontogenic abscesses.

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Delayed-onset infections are rare postoperative complications of lower third molar extractions. This article presents a case of a chronic combined hard and soft tissue infection after the extraction of a third molar, where the causative organisms could only be elucidated by molecular methods. Experimental 16S-rRNA gene analysis with next-generation sequencing and bioinformatics was used to identify the bacterial spectrum of the infection.

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Introduction: Serious abscesses of an odontogenic origin occur frequently in the oral and maxillofacial surgery departments. Rapid surgical incision and drainage constitutes the most important therapeutic action. However, additional surgical therapy and supplementary administration of antibiotics is often carried out, such that the efficiency of this supplementary therapeutic option has been questioned.

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Precise fitting and immobilisation of bone transplants at the recipient site is of utmost importance for the healing process. With the help of the standardised Osseo Transfer System, the recipient site is adjusted to the graft, rather than vice versa as it is typically done. The aim of this study was to analyse donor-site morbidity after harvesting cylindrical bone grafts from the retromolar region using the Osseo Transfer System.

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Introduction: Dental aplasia is an anomaly in which the number of teeth is reduced. It is the most commonly occurring dental anomaly during tooth development. Treatment management of patients with dental aplasia is challenging.

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Purpose: Microvascular fibula flap surgery is a reliable and effective procedure for reconstructing the jaws after tumour surgery. This procedure allows the placement of dental implants after bone consolidation. This study was designed to evaluate the oral, functional, and aesthetic rehabilitation of tumour patients with immediate fibula transfer and dental implants and included assessment of diet, speech, and aesthetics.

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Purpose: Ablative oncological surgery to treat head-and-neck cancer often triggers a requirement for jaw reconstruction. Modern surgical procedures using free microvascular flaps afford acceptable outcomes in terms of restoration of bony and soft tissue defects. A fibula free flap is often the preferred flap, as the bone length is considerable and a two-surgeon approach is possible.

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Objective: Resection of posteriorly located oral squamous cell carcinomas (OSCCs) remains challenging for head and neck surgeons. However, several surgical techniques, such as lip and mandibular splitting, as well as submental "visor drop-down" of intraoral soft tissues, have been proposed for this purpose. Merrick et al.

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Objective: Premature craniosynostosis of the lambdoid suture is rare. The use of differential diagnosis to rule out positional occipital plagiocephaly is crucial. Nevertheless, once diagnosed, lambdoid craniosynostosis requires corrective surgery to prevent intracranial harm and aesthetic stigma by significant dyscrania.

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Background: Positional head deformity in early childhood is asserted to be a benign and in some cases spontaneously correcting entity encountered in craniofacial surgery. Although many authors have stated that helmet therapy is indicated in moderate and severe cases of deformational plagiocephaly and brachycephaly; others have reported resolution of these conditions within the first 2 to 3 years of life. A recent randomized controlled trial found that helmet therapy does not have beneficial effects for patients with positional head deformity.

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The increased number of adolescents and young adults with unknown or inaccurately given date of birth is a current issue in justice and legal medicine. The objective of this study was to determine the extent to which third molar calcification stages assessed on panoramic X-rays could be useful as additional criteria for forensic age estimation in living individuals, focusing on the legally important ages 17 and 18. In a retrospective multi-center study, the developmental stage of each individual's third molar was analyzed using Demirjian's scale in 2360 cases.

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Perioperative assessment of craniosynostosis is based mostly on subjective scores. In this study, we sought to find an objective method to assess cranial deformation based on normative craniofacial percentiles. Anthropometric datasets from 104 (79 males, 25 females) patients with craniosynostoses were included.

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Introduction: The use of autologous block bone grafts for horizontal alveolar ridge augmentation in dental implantology is a common surgical procedure. Typically, bone grafts are individually moulded.

Objective: The aim of this paper is to introduce an innovative procedure in lateral bone augmentation, where the recipient side is adjusted to the graft, not vice versa as in common procedures.

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In patients with bony defects, autologous bone grafts are the "gold standard" for reconstruction. In children, autologous bone harvesting is limited but tissue engineering offers an alternative. Next to bone marrow, adipose tissue is a source of mesenchymal stromal cells, and adipose-derived stromal cells (ADSC) can differentiate into osteocytes.

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Objective: To evaluate the impact of stretching exercises versus available bedding pillows on positional head deformities.

Study Design: Fifty children aged 5 months or younger with positional head deformity were included in this prospective clinical trial (n=20 plagiocephaly, n=10 brachycephaly, n=20 combination). A random distribution was performed for treatment with the bedding pillow alone (n=25) or with stretching exercises (n=25) for 6 weeks.

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Objective: Based on a pilot study including >400 children and a comprehensive database analysis of >2500 children, we sought to define the craniofacial norm and to objectify the categorization of positional head deformity.

Study Design: A database was created containing clinical information on children assessed for nonsynostotic cranial deformity. The findings of standardized anthropometric measurements were compared with data from a group of 401 healthy children with a normal head shape collected in terms of a prospective pilot study.

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Purpose: Correction of craniosynostosis is necessary in predominant cases. Surgical planning usually requires a preoperative CT to estimate the bony and intracerebral structures. A postoperative CT scan would involve a significant dose of radiation, which carries an elevated risk of malignant tumor development in later life.

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Background: The coronal incision is a standard surgical approach in craniofacial surgery. For pediatric patients, it holds a certain risk for unbeneficial aesthetic outcome due to a broadening of the scar in the fast-growing infant skull.

Methods: We readopted the coronal approach over the last decade and developed a sinusoidal type of incision based on the “stealth incision” by Munro and Fearon.

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Introduction: Embolia cutis medicamentosa (Nicolau syndrome) is a rare iatrogenic event of tissue necrosis after intramuscular or intraarticular application of cristalloid suspensions. Clinically, it presents as a livid discoloration of the skin, local pain, and signs of inflammation.

Methods: This article presents the first case of Nicolau syndrome after the endodontic application of calcium hydroxide paste into the distal root canal of tooth 18.

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Objective: Helmet therapy is an established method to correct positional head deformity in early infancy. Side effects such as skin erythema or pressure sores are well known for helmet therapy, but not yet adequately discussed in current literature.

Patients And Methods: Retrospectively, all patient-sheets of infants treated by individual orthotic therapy in the years 2007 and 2008 were sighted and complications were noted.

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