For Release: November 22, 2010
PALO ALTO, Calif. — Pediatric plastic surgeon Rohit Khosla, MD, had never seen a case like it: the 12-year-old boy's face ballooned with a rare, aggressive bone tumor. Although it was non-cancerous, the tumor was destroying the patient's jaw. Khosla knew he would need an innovative approach to save the boy's ability to chew.
"The situation was pretty complicated," said Khosla, who practices at Lucile Packard Children's Hospital Stanford. "If he tried to open his mouth, part of the jaw would get stuck. We had to come up with a way to remove all the bone that was involved and reconstruct the mandible." To complicate things further, the Bay Area boy, whose family asked that he not be identified for this story, wasn't finished growing. If his diseased bone was replaced with a static implant, he would eventually outgrow it, leaving his face lopsided.
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