Science Current Events | Science News | Brightsurf.com
 
Email a Friend Send to a friend
Printer Friendly Print Plastic surgery to restore facial defects

Plastic surgery to restore facial defects

August 04, 2005

Helps give mentally disabled children a better lease on life

ARLINGTON HEIGHTS, Ill. - Reconstructing severe facial deformities in children with mental disabilities can be a hard decision for parents. Insurance companies may consider some operations to be only for cosmetic purposes and refuse to cover them. However, craniofacial plastic surgery, to correct abnormalities of the face, skull and neck, may give these children significant psychological, social and emotional benefits that can help them attain a better quality of life, according to a report in the August issue of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery®, the official medical journal of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS).




"Plastic surgery to correct defects of the face, skull, and neck is reconstructive and functional in nature, not merely cosmetic, as some insurance companies assert," said Steven Buchman, MD, ASPS Member Surgeon and author of the report. "Children with severe mental impairments undoubtedly benefit from plastic surgery and ultimately gain the functional tools that will help them lead a fuller life."

According to the report, a person's physical appearance can positively or negatively influence their ability to socialize. This, in turn, can influence long-term relationships with peers and employers as well as the ability to manage daily tasks and properly function in society. Because social relationships are key predictors of quality of life, children with facial deformities greatly benefit from craniofacial plastic surgery, allowing them to appear more normal and to help gain social acceptance.

People may use a person's facial characteristics to form opinions about traits and other personal attributes, according to the report. In the case of a child with mental disabilities and facial abnormalities, other children may react negatively and refuse to play with him or her, often causing the child to withdraw socially. Consistent rejection could lead to serious social impairments and impede the child's ability to relate.

In addition, the more these children are accepted by their peers, teachers and parents, and the more interactions they have with others, the better they learn. Teachers may underestimate the intellectual abilities of children with facial deformities and have correspondingly low expectations for their achievement. Parents may also unknowingly share these low expectations. By addressing the deformities, the subconscious bias of teachers, parents and other adults may diminish, giving the child a better chance to be exposed to positive feedback and increase their learning capability.

"Calling these surgeries cosmetic demeans the benefits these children gain," said Dr. Buchman. "By fixing their deformities, we positively change the way others interact, react and relate with them, helping shape how well they learn, socialize and adapt to the world around them."

Increasing insurance company denials, restrictions on covered procedures and a new tactic of excluding specific reconstructive procedures may be forcing some children and adults to live with disfigurement or painful medical conditions. This restrictive access to care contributed to a 10 percent decline in reconstructive plastic surgery procedures in 2004, the ASPS reports.

American Society of Plastic Surgeons



Related Facial Deformities Current Events and Facial Deformities News Articles
Scientists reveal secrets of Homer's Cyclops to help people with Holoprosencephaly
Homer's Cyclops might be myth, but a disorder that can cause babies to be born with only one eye is very real. Scientists from Cleveland, Ohio, and Paris, France, reached an important milestone in understanding one of the molecular causes of a rare, but serious birth defect, Holoprosencephaly.

High-resolution CT scan modeling for creating facial implants aids in facial reconstruction surgery
A preliminary study suggests that high-resolution computed tomography (CT) modeling allows surgeons to custom-design acrylic implants prior to reconstructive surgery for patients with severe defects in their faces and eye cavities.

Key neural system at risk from fetal alcohol exposure
In a study of adult monkeys who were exposed to moderate amounts of alcohol in utero, scientists have found that prenatal exposure to alcohol-even in small doses-has pronounced effects on the development and function later in life of the brain's dopamine system, a critical component of the central nervous system that regulates many regions of the brain.
More Facial Deformities Current Events and Facial Deformities News Articles
ORAL AND FACIAL DEFORMITY
by CHRISTOPHER KERR MCNEIL

Long-lasting injectable implant * for correcting cosmetic nasal deformities.(FACIAL PLASTIC SURGERY CLINIC): An article from: Ear, Nose and Throat Journal
by Steven H. Dayan, Ryan M. Greene, Allison A. Chambers

This digital document is an article from Ear, Nose and Throat Journal, published by Thomson Gale on January 1, 2007. The length of the article is 880 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.Citation...

Facial deformities and plastic surgery,: A psychosocial study, (American lecture series, publication no. 174. A Monograph in the Bannerstone Division of ... and American lectures in psychiatry)
by Frances M. Cooke Macgregor

Color atlas and text of orthognathic surgery : the surgery of facial skeletal deformity
by Derek Henderson



Heroes With a Thousand Faces: True Stories of People with Facial Deformities & Their Quest for Acceptance (Cleveland Clinic Guides) (Cleveland Clinic Guides)
by Laura Greenwald

This title features real stories of people with facial differences - people whose faces are disfigured as a result of cancer, trauma, or a birth defect. Unlike other disabilities, a facial difference not only affects how one is viewed by others but also how one views him or herself, since so much of our "immediate" identity is wrapped up in appearance. This book explores what it's like to try and...

A Colour Atlas and Textbook of Orthognathic Surgery: The Surgery of Facial Skeletal Deformity (Wolfe Medical Atlases)
by Derek Henderson, David E. Poswillo

Sternocleidomastoid muscle flap reconstruction during parotidectomy to prevent Frey's syndrome and facial contour deformity.: An article from: Ear, Nose and Throat Journal
by Korhan Asal, Ahmet Koybasioglu, Erdogan Inal, Ahmet Ural, S. Sabri Uslu, Alper Ceylan, Fikret Ileri

This digital document is an article from Ear, Nose and Throat Journal, published by Thomson Gale on March 1, 2005. The length of the article is 2982 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.Citation DetailsTitle:...



Treatment of Facial Cleft Deformities: An Illustrated Guide
by Kurt-W Butow

University of Pretoria, South Africa. Interdisciplinary reference for maxillofacial, oral, and plastic surgeons, pediatricians, and speech-language therapists. Covers all phases of treatment, including speech-therapy and...

Facial Deformities and Plastic Surgery: a psychological study
by MacGregor et al

...

The treatment of facial deformities and extreme malocclusions (Oral surgery, oral medicine, and oral pathology)
by Kurt H Thoma

© 2008 BrightSurf.com