Lea Alhilali, MD Profile picture
Neuroradiologist @HRInstitute_AZ. @BarrowNeuro. Striving to make learning neuroimaging and anatomy fun. If I can make you laugh, I can make you learn.

May 7, 2022, 12 tweets

1/
My fellows complained they hate memorizing classifications, like LeFort. I thought, “There must be a better way—maybe understanding instead of memorizing.”

A #tweetorial about understanding the LeFort classification. #FOAMed #medtwitter #Medstudenttwitter @medtweetorials

2/
To understand LeFort, you need to understand facial buttresses.
These are not true anatomic structures but a way of understanding facial structure.
Facial bones support facial structures like a table supports food, with legs (vertical buttresses) and table top (horizontal)

3/
In the face, the two main structures the buttresses are supporting are the orbits and the alveolar ridges of the maxilla and mandible supporting the teeth

4/
The buttresses not only support against gravity, but also against the force of mastication, which sends force from the mandible all the way through the maxilla to the skullbase

5/
The buttresses are the table tops and table legs resisting these forces

6/
Horizontal buttresses—there is a tabletop underlying each of the structures that need support in the face: the orbit, maxillary teeth, mandibular teeth, and mandible

7/

Here is the illustration of the horizontal buttresses and their official anatomic names. However, the names aren’t as important as remembering where they are—and you can do that by remembering that each important structure has a tabletop right below it.

8/
Vertical buttresses—these are the support posts. And they are arranged just how you would arrange them if you were building a house. Two in front, two in back.

9/
Here is the illustration of the vertical buttresses and their official anatomic names. But again, names aren’t important—function is!

10/

Vertical buttresses act as suspension wires for the maxilla, suspending it from the skullbase. They are what keep your face on!

11/

LeFort fx is when your face (maxilla) gets take off! To take it off, we have to cut the suspension wires--all three (posterior, medial, and lateral). The posterior buttress (pterygoid plate) is always cut. That is why pterygoid fx's are the signature of LeFort injuries

12/

Where we cut the other two buttresses determines which LeFort fx we get.

And now, you can just think of cutting the suspension wire to the maxilla, and never have to memorize the LeFort classification again!

Share this Scrolly Tale with your friends.

A Scrolly Tale is a new way to read Twitter threads with a more visually immersive experience.
Discover more beautiful Scrolly Tales like this.

Keep scrolling