1. Surgical management of maxillomandibular advancement in sleep apnea patients: specific technical considerations.
- Author
-
Gilon Y, Raskin S, Heymans O, and Poirrier R
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Blood Loss, Surgical, Clinical Protocols, Female, Forecasting, Hospitalization, Humans, Jaw Fixation Techniques, Length of Stay, Male, Malocclusion surgery, Mandible surgery, Middle Aged, Nasal Septum surgery, Obesity complications, Osteotomy, Le Fort, Patient Care Planning, Postoperative Care, Treatment Outcome, Mandibular Advancement, Maxilla surgery, Osteotomy methods, Sleep Apnea, Obstructive surgery
- Abstract
Maxillomandibular advancement is an integral part of the surgical treatment of patients suffering from obstructive sleep apnea. A number of publications report its efficacy and have attempted to define predictive success criteria. However, few authors have shown an interest in the surgical specificity of this intervention and in the difficulties that can be encountered, which differ from those seen in conventional orthognathic surgery. In this article, a series of patients treated with maxillomandibular osteotomy to correct obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (n = 17) are compared with patients who underwent surgery for the correction of dentofacial disharmonies (n = 33). Observations emphasized the importance of respecting a strict surgical and postsurgical protocol to avoid any technical traps linked to maxillomandibular advancement, both in preoperative simulations and during and after surgery. Results concerning sleep parameters will be the subject of a future publication.
- Published
- 2001