Craniofacial reconstruction is sometimes called orbital-craniofacial surgery
There are no mainstream alternatives to craniofacial reconstruction in the treatment of birth defects, traumatic injuries, or disfigurement resulting from cancer surgery.
Craniofacial reconstruction refers to a group of procedures used to repair or reshape the face and skull of a living person, or to create a replica of the head and face of a dead or missing person
The first attempts at craniofacial reconstruction in children with congenital abnormalities were made in the late 1940s by Sir Harold Gillies, a British plastic surgeon who had treated disfigured World War II veterans
Craniofacial reconstruction dates back to the late nineteenth century, when doctors in Germany and France first used it to produce more accurate images of the faces of certain famous people who had died before the invention of photography.
Children who have had a disfiguring injury often develop post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, or anxiety.Adult patients also have high rates of depression, PTSD, or anxiety disorders following craniofacial reconstruction.
In the 1920s, British physicians pioneered the application of facial reconstruction to unsolved criminal cases and to treating World War I veterans who had been disfigured in combat.
the Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction
Another name for World Bank as :IBRD i.e. International Bank for Reconstruction and Development.
Another name for World Bank as :IBRD i.e. International Bank for Reconstruction and Development.
In children.to repair abnormalities.resulting from birth defects.genetic disorders.traumatic injuries.In adults, following head or facial trauma.on cancer patients.The third major application.is in forensic medicine and anthropology.
Yes
Reconstruction OR "The Era of Reconstruction"