Abstract: | Inferior turbinectomy, often combined with septal surgery, is frequently performed in the surgical treatment of nasal obstruction. A patient with post-operative greater palatine anaesthesia occurring after this procedure prompted a study of the anatomy of the greater palatine nerve in the region of the inferior turbinate. Sixty-four lateral nasal walls were examined in cadavers. A dehiscence rate of 22% was noted, and in an additional 55% there was only a minimal bony covering to the nerve. Dehiscences occurred exclusively in the inferior meatus, anterior to the posterior bony end of the inferior turbinate. The narrow antero-posterior extent of the dehiscence, the hard dense lateral nasal wall bone and the lateral position of the nerve in the canal help to protect the nerve from surgical trauma during turbinate surgery. |