Background: Diagnostic errors constitute one of the reasons for the improper and often delayed treatment of mandibular fractures. The aim of this study was to present a series of cases involving undiagnosed concomitant secondary fractures in the mandibular body during preoperative diagnostics. Additionally, this study aimed to describe the "air sign" as an indirect indicator of a mandibular body fracture.

Methods: A retrospective analysis of CT/CBCT scans conducted before surgery was performed on patients misdiagnosed with a mandibular body fracture within a one-year period.

Results: Among the 75 patients who underwent surgical treatment for mandibular fractures, mandibular body fractures were missed in 3 cases (4%) before surgery. The analysis of CT/CBCT before surgery revealed the presence of an air collection, termed the "air sign", in the soft tissue adjacent to each misdiagnosed fracture of the mandibular body.

Conclusions: The "air sign" in a CT/CBCT scan may serve as an additional indirect indication of a fracture in the mandibular body. Its presence should prompt the surgeon to conduct a more thorough clinical examination of the patient under general anesthesia after completing the ORIF procedure in order to rule-out additional fractures.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10888197PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics14040362DOI Listing

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