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Morphometric evaluation and classification of the superior orbital fissure on 3D MDCT images

The anatomy of the superior orbital fissure is very important because of the spaces it connects, the regions it is adjacent to, and the structures it contains. We aimed to study the width, length and types of the structure, their change according to gender, body sides, and age. The fissure shape has...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Anatomical science international 2023-03, Vol.98 (2), p.196-203
Main Authors: Pirinc, Busra, Fazliogullari, Zeliha, Koplay, Mustafa, Karabulut, Ahmet Kagan, Unver Dogan, Nadire
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:The anatomy of the superior orbital fissure is very important because of the spaces it connects, the regions it is adjacent to, and the structures it contains. We aimed to study the width, length and types of the structure, their change according to gender, body sides, and age. The fissure shape has many variations that are not easy to systematize. Therefore, it was aimed to classify them with various reference points determined for the first time, identify their types and determine their incidence. An objective and comprehensive classification was used on 3-dimensional images using multidetector computed tomography. We retrospectively evaluated the orbit and paranasal sinus computerized tomography images of 200 individuals (age range: 3 months-90 years;106 female, 94 male). The shape of fissure were identified and classified, it is length and width were measured. There was no statistical difference in the length of the fissure according to gender on both sides, and in width only on the left ( p ˃0.05). On the right side, it was statistically significantly wider in female ( p ˂0.05). While the fissure types were grouped based on observation in the literature, they were defined more comprehensively according to different shape features by giving a certain reference lines by us for the first time and evaluated over seven types. The most common shape for both sides was racket-shaped type (right: 24.5%, left: 26%), while the least common was narrow type (right: 1%, left: 2%). Thus, the shape variations of structure have gained a systematic typing criterion for the first time with the definitions in our study.
ISSN:1447-6959
1447-073X
DOI:10.1007/s12565-022-00687-2