Dr.Rohan Goel – Plastic & Aesthetic Surgery | Muzaffarnagar

Trauma & Emergency Reconstruction

Traumatic injuries from accidents, sports impacts, animal bites, or domestic mishaps can cause severe disruption to the complex structural network of the face and body. Emergency reconstruction is a highly specialized branch of plastic and reconstructive surgery that goes beyond simple wound closure. It focuses on the immediate, precise alignment of fractured bones, the meticulous repair of delicate nerves and blood vessels, and the preservation of soft tissue.

The primary goal of emergency reconstruction is twofold: functional restoration (ensuring you can breathe, chew, blink, and move normally) and aesthetic harmony (minimizing long-term deformity and scarring by utilizing advanced plastic surgery closure techniques from the very first day).

By removing excess, hanging skin and targeted fat deposits, an arm lift tightens the structural tissue framework from the underarm area to the elbow, restoring a toned, sculpted, and youthfully proportioned arm profile.

Quick Facts

The Golden Window

Whenever possible, complex soft tissue lacerations and facial fractures should be evaluated and treated by a reconstructive surgeon within the first 24 to 48 hours to minimize infection risks and optimize primary healing.

Anesthesia

Local anesthesia with sedation for minor soft tissue repairs; general anesthesia for complex facial fractures or multi-layered trauma.

Stay Required

Outpatient for isolated soft tissue lacerations; 1 to 3 nights in the hospital for complex bony facial fractures or multi-stage reconstructions.

Initial Recovery

7 to 14 days for initial wound healing and stitch removal; 6 weeks for fractured facial bones to completely fuse and regain structural strength.

Comprehensive Indications: What We Treat

Trauma reconstruction addresses injuries across multiple anatomical layers, including skin, fat, muscle, cartilage, and bone:

  1. Complex Soft Tissue Lacerations
  • Intricate Facial Cuts: Jagged, deep, or multi-layered cuts across highly visible zones like the eyelids, lips, nose, and cheeks.
  • Avulsion Injuries & Tissue Loss: Incidents where a section of skin or soft tissue has been completely torn away, requiring advanced skin grafting or local tissue rearrangement (flaps).
  • Animal & Human Bites: Complex tear wounds that require thorough, sterile decontamination combined with meticulous layered closure to prevent severe infection and contour deformities.
  1. Maxillofacial (Facial Bone) Fractures

 

  • Nasal Fractures: Realignment of broken nasal bones to restore a straight bridge and preserve an open internal airway for normal breathing.
  • Orbital Floor Fractures (Blowout): Repairing the thin bony socket surrounding the eye to prevent the eye from sinking backward (enophthalmos) and to eliminate double vision.
  • Mandible & Maxilla Fractures: Precision alignment of the lower and upper jawbones using tiny, low-profile titanium plates and screws to perfectly restore your natural dental bite (occlusion).
  • Zygomaticomaxillary (Cheekbone) Fractures: Rebuilding the structural prominent contours of the cheek and outer orbit after blunt force impact.

The Reconstructive Approach: Layered Restoration

Step 1: Rigid Fixation of Bone

For facial fractures, the surgeon accesses the bones through hidden incisions (inside the mouth or within natural eyelid creases). The bones are carefully realigned and locked into position using microscopic, medical-grade titanium plates.

Step 2: Microsurgical Nerve & Muscle Repair

Severed facial muscles, tiny tear ducts, or delicate motor nerves are meticulously re-joined under high-power surgical magnification using ultra-fine sutures to restore natural facial expressions and movement.

Step 3: Anatomical Layered Closure

The deep fat, muscle, and sub-skin layers are individually stitched back together. This completely removes tension from the top skin edges, which is the most critical factor in preventing wide, stretched-out scars.

Step 4: Plastic Surgery Subcuticular Stitching

The top skin layer is sealed using exceptionally fine, hair-thin stitches placed just beneath the skin surface, ensuring minimal surface marks.

The Recovery & Remodeling Timeline

START

Side Effects vs. Warning Signs

Expected Normal Symptoms
Warning Signs (Call the Clinic Immediately)
Universal swelling, localized bruising, and facial puffiness
Sudden, dramatic swelling or a firm, painful bulge on one side of the face
Temporary skin numbness or a "tingling" sensation near the injury
Active, dark red bleeding that rapidly soaks through bandages. A fever rising above 101°F (38.3°C)
Minor pink or clear fluid tracking lightly onto dressings
Foul-smelling internal discharge, extreme heat, or spreading redness . A sudden change in your vision or an inability to close your eye

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ's)

Trusted guidance to help you feel informed and confident about your surgical journey..

The primary goal of emergency reconstruction is to restore your pre-injury appearance as closely as anatomically possible. By using specialized plastic surgery closure techniques and hidden incision placements, we can often disguise the structural repairs beautifully. Residual asymmetries or textures can be refined later during secondary scar revision phases.

No. The microscopic plates and screws used in modern maxillofacial surgery are made of highly biocompatible, medical-grade titanium. They are designed to stay in your body permanently, causing no long-term harm, irritation, or reactions. They will not trigger airport metal detectors or interfere with future medical imaging like MRIs. They are only removed in the rare event of a localized tissue infection or hardware exposure.

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Emergency reconstruction is the primary phase performed immediately after an injury to close wounds, align bones, and save tissue. A scar revision is a secondary, elective phase performed 6 to 12 months later—after the tissues have completely matured—to surgically trace, thin, or redirect any scars that healed unevenly, maximizing the final aesthetic result.

For light desk work or remote administrative duties, most patients feel completely comfortable returning within 10 to 14 days, once acute swelling drops and stitches are removed. However, if your job involves manual labor, heavy physical lifting, or a risk of facial impact, you must wait a minimum of 4 to 6 weeks until the bone structure has fully fused

Improving Your Looks. Maximising Your Life

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