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Lateral Crural Steal With Columellar Strut Graft in Primary Open Rhinoplasty

Lateral Crural Steal With Columellar Strut Graft in Primary Open Rhinoplasty

Recruiting
18-60 years
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

The goal of this clinical trial is to assess the effect of Lateral crural steal with Columellar strut graft done in Primary Open Rhinoplasty and its long-term sustainability on nasal tip projection and nasal tip rotation.

Description

Rhinoplasty is one of the most commonly performed aesthetic procedures worldwide, with the nasal tip being the most challenging aspect of it. The nasal tip represents the most anterior projecting point of the nose and is formed by the junction of the medial and lateral crura of lower lateral cartilages.

Projection, rotation, and definition are key aspects to be controlled and achieved in the nasal tip surgery. Preservation of natural tip support is a fundamental requirement of a successful rhinoplasty.

Although excisional techniques can produce reductions in lobular width, long-term contour alterations are unpredictable and subject to stigmatic tip deformity. As a consequence, aggressive excision-based techniques are increasingly recognized as haphazard, unpredictable, and disproportionately prone to undesirable postoperative contour deformities.

The lateral crural steal (LCS) is a tissue-conservative technique of nasal tip refinement through relocation of domal apices. Hence, modifying nasal tip projection and rotation. However, the long-term stability of tip position with LCS alone can be variable. To enhance support and long-term maintenance of tip projection, a columellar strut graft -placed between the medial crura- acts as a central scaffold, unifying the nasal tip and helping to control the final nasal tip position.

The lateral crural steal technique alone can achieve improvements in nasal tip projection and rotation, but with weak medial crura, it can twist or compress down the medial crura, which will result in loss of tip height. So, in the technique being studied, combining the LCS with a columellar strut graft can provide both dynamic and static support to the nasal tip.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Patients seeking primary rhinoplasty for aesthetic and/or functional indications.
  • Presence of inadequate nasal tip projection and/or rotation suitable for correction using lateral crural steal with columellar strut graft.
  • Ability to provide written informed consent and comply with follow-up visits.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • History of prior nasal surgery.
  • History of severe nasal trauma, altering cartilage architecture.
  • Significant functional nasal obstruction requiring complex external nasal valve reconstruction.
  • Patients with excessively wide alar base requiring alar base reduction involving vestibular sill excision (to prevent confounding on projection/rotation).
  • Patients with facial skeletal or developmental abnormalities e.g. maxillary hypoplasia, maxillary prognathism, dentofacial deformities.
  • Patients with psychiatric illness or Body Dysmorphic Disorder.
  • Significant medical comorbidities contraindicating elective surgery or general anesthesia.
  • Inability to provide informed consent or comply with follow-up.

Study details
    Rhinoplasty
    Nasal Surgery
    Aesthetic Outcomes

NCT07317947

Kafrelsheikh University

31 January 2026

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