PRACTICA OTO-RHINO-LARYNGOLOGICA

Vol. 98  No. March 2005


Intranasal Dermoplasty for Epistaxis in a Patient 
with Hereditary Hemorrhagic Telangiectasia        
(Osler-Weber-Rendu Disease): A Case Report        

Takehiro Iki
(Otsu Red Cross Hospital)

Yasuyuki Hiratsuka, Ryo Asato, Shinzo Tanaka and Juichi Ito
(Kyoto University School of Medicine)

Koichi Omori
(Fukushima Medical University School of Medicine)

      Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT, Osler-Weber-Rendu disease) is a systemic disorder of blood vessels. The most common manifestation of HHT is recurrent epistaxis, occurring in almost 90% of patients. Management of epistaxis is usually difficult and many types of treatment have been advocated. Of all these treatments, intranasal dermoplasty is considered the most effective one. It reduces the frequency of epistaxis by removing the telangiectatic mucosa and replacing it with a split thickness skin graft.
      We report a 55-year-old woman with HHT and recurrent epistaxis who was treated with intranasal dermoplasty. Postoperatively, she has shown considerable reduction in the frequency and severity of her epistaxis.

Key words : intranasal dermoplasty, hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (Osler-Weber-Rendu disease), recurrent epistaxis

 


第98巻3号 目次   Vol.98 No.3 contents