Zygomatic frontal subsidence
Introduction
Introduction The tibia frontal bone depression is one of the clinical symptoms of cross-lateral atrophy. Cross-lateral atrophy is extremely rare in the clinic. The tibia frontal bone can go to the hospital for surgery or plastic surgery. The diseases associated with it are fractures, fractures of the tibia, and lateral atrophy of the face.
Cause
Cause
The pathogenesis of this disease and the lateral side atrophy are still unclear. It is currently believed that the occurrence of this disease and sympathetic dysfunction lead to vascular movement and nutritional dysfunction, it is also conceived to be related to facial, craniocerebral or neck traumatic infection, trigeminal neuropathy, fetal injury or endocrine dysfunction.
Examine
an examination
Related inspection
X-ray lipiodol angiography CT examination blood routine
The clinical manifestations are: atrophy in the upper part of the face or in the ankle, the lesion slowly develops to half of the face, occasionally affecting the head, neck, and contralateral body, the skin of the ward is atrophy, wrinkles, often accompanied by hair loss, pigmentation Sinking, white sputum, telangiectasia, increased or decreased secretion of sweat glands, and subsidence of the frontal bone of the tibia.
Diagnosis
Differential diagnosis
Differential diagnosis of the frontal sag of the humerus:
Clinical differentiation from unilateral mandibular hypoplasia and unilateral hypertrophy should also be distinguished from infantile hemiplegia and lipodystrophy.
Hemiplegia, also called hemiplegia, refers to the movement disorder of the upper and lower limbs, the facial muscles and the lower part of the tongue. It is a common symptom of acute cerebrovascular disease.
Lipodystrophy, also known as fat redistribution, is a disorder in your body that produces, uses, and stores fat.
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