Abstract

Fortunately, traumatic total amputations of the nose are rare, especially in children. Their reconstructions generally require several operative steps, most often associating cartilaginous grafts (rib and/or concha), a free radial antebrachial flap for mucosal reconstruction and a frontal flap for the skin covering. These are therefore long and complex procedures requiring a trained surgical team and maximum patient adherence to their treatment plan. The clinical case described is that of an 11-year-old child presenting a sub-total amputation of the nose and having undergone reconstruction with skin expansion of the frontal flap due to a horizontal frontal scar of unknown origin and a particularly low hair implantation.

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