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Unusual frontal bone injury.

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TLDR
A 12-year old girl presented 6 months after a forehead injury due to fall from height with a deformed forehead with a rectangular bone defect and a rectangular bicortical bone fragment impacted into the lower edge of the defect.
Abstract
A 12-year old girl presented 6 months after a forehead injury due to fall from height. She had a deformed forehead with a rectangular bone defect and a rectangular bicortical bone fragment impacted into the lower edge of the defect. There was no obvious skin or dural injury. The deformed forehead was exposed through a bi-coronal scalp flap. The bone fragment was reposited back into the defect. The forehead of the patient healed with a smooth contour.

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Forehead anatomy: Arterial variations and venous link of the midline forehead flap

TL;DR: The results show that the supratrochlear and dorsal nasal arteries have a relatively constant origin and the central artery and vein favours the median forehead flap as anatomically superior and the prominent central vein is a constant landmark on which to select the side of the pedicle.
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