An Assessment of Autologous Fat Graft Administration in Hemifacial Microsomia Patients with or Without Distraction Osteogenesis: A Preliminary Study
Peterson Makinde Atiba, Okikioluwa Stephen Aladeyelu, Dolongo Onyangunga-Kabanga, Anil Madaree, Lelika LazarusAbstract
Introduction:
Hemifacial microsomia (HFM) is managed based on its classification, with treatment approaches according to severity. This study aims to assess the impact of autologous fat graft (AFG) administration in HFM patients with or without distraction osteogenesis (MDO).
Methodology:
The patients were sex and age-matched (mean age 5.8 ± 2.8 years) into two treatment groups: AFG-treated and MDO + AFG-treated and an untreated control group (mean age 5.8 ± 2.8 years), each with five patients. Computed tomography scans were used to measure the ramus height (MRH), ramus width (MRW), body length (MBL), body height (MBH), chin point deviation (CPD), and occlusal plane angle (OPA) across the three groups.
Results:
In the AFG-treated group, fat treatment resulted in significant increases in MRH (
Conclusion:
AFG alone corrects major skeletal and soft tissue HFM deformities. It also supplements MDO, correcting residual MBL asymmetry and informing a new, function-based treatment algorithm. AFG is a valuable procedure in managing mild and severe HFM.