Testing the effects of long-acting steroids in edema and ecchymosis after closed rhinoplasty
View/ Open
Date
2014Corporate Author(s)
Pontificia Universidad Javeriana. Facultad de Medicina. Departamento de Cirugía y Especialidades. Otorrinolaringología
Type
Artículo de revista
ISSN
2292-5503 / 2292-5511 (Electrónico)
Pages
83-87
Item type
Artículo original
Share this record
Citación
Metadata
Show full item record
PDF documents
Abstract
Background: Steroids have proven to be of some benefit in rhinoplasty edema and ecchymosis when administered at a high and repeated
dose.
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the effects of single-dose, long-acting intramuscular steroids on postoperative edema and ecchymosis after closed rhinoplasty with osteotomies compared with placebo.
Methods: A randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled trial
was performed. Fifty-four patients were randomly assigned to two groups:
28 received a single dose of long-acting dexamethasone (mean [± SD]
dose 16±4 mg) immediately before anesthetic induction; the remaining
26 received an intramuscular injection of saline solution. The same surgeon performed all surgeries, with patients under general anesthesia.
Acetaminophen was the only analgesic used to control postoperative pain.
High-resolution digital photographs were taken on postoperative days 1, 3,
7 and 14. Scoring was performed separately for eyelid swelling and ecchymosis by an independent observer using a graded scale (0 to 5) for edema
and a scoring system (0 to 13) for ecchymosis.
Results: No statistically significant differences in terms of age, sex or
amount of bleeding during surgery were found between the two groups. No
statistically significant difference was observed in the decrease of both
ecchymosis and edema between placebo and high-dose, long-acting dexamethasone. A statistically significant difference in operation time was
found, favouring the steroid group. No severe complications were observed
due to steroid use.
Discussion: Osteotomies are basically a form of (controlled) trauma, with
considerable disruption of the abundant blood vessels in this facial region and,
therefore, are associated with with undesirable effects. A recent meta-analysis
failed to show benefits of the use of steroids after postoperative day 3. Only a
trend toward reduction in edema and ecchymosis with the use of long-acting
steroids compared with placebo was demonstrated in the present study.
Conclusion: There was no benefit in administering single-dose, longacting steroids in patients undergoing closed rhinoplasty with osteotomies.
Link to the resource
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4116320/Source
Plastic Surgery; Vol. 22 Núm. 2 (2014)
Google Analytics Statistics
Collections
- Artículos [40]