Elizabeth S Longino, Cherian K Kandathil, Jamil Ahmad, Stephen B Baker, Jose E Barrera, R Laurence Berkowitz, Amit D Bhrany, Roxana Cobo, Oren A Friedman, Joe Gryskiewicz, Grant S Hamilton, Daniel Knott, Ben C Marcus, Sam L Oyer, Priyesh N Patel, Steven J Pearlman, Rod J Rohrich, Manish I Shah, Emily A Spataro, Ali Totonchi, Adam Bryce Weinfeld, Brian J F Wong, Sam P Most
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Abstract
Background: The most critical exam components in patients seeking rhinoplasty have not been established.
Objective: To identify concordance among experienced rhinoplasty surgeons regarding the most important exam features for various deformities.
Methods: An online questionnaire was distributed to board-certified facial plastic and plastic surgeons experienced in rhinoplasty, with seven nasal deformity categories: dorsal hump, crooked nose, boxy tip, pinched tip, droopy tip, saddle nose, and nonallergic nasal obstruction. For each, respondents were asked to rank the three most important anatomic regions to examine from the following: nasal bones, midvault cartilage, skin, radix, facial profile, lip, tip, septum, internal nasal valve, nostrils, inferior and middle turbinates. For each ranked region, up to three important features were chosen. Normalized Attention Scores (NAS) were calculated to determine agreement amongst surgeons.
Results: A total of 13 facial plastic and 8 plastic surgeons were invited to participate and completed the questionnaire. All cases had high agreement demonstrated by NAS, with the dorsal hump case exhibiting the greatest variability in responses.
Conclusions: In this survey of 21 rhinoplasty surgeons, there was general agreement regarding the most relevant anatomical structures and features, which may provide a conceptual foundation for identifying key exam features for seven common complaints in patients seeking rhinoplasty.