Abstract

Glenoid fossa morphology may change following orthognathic surgery and may subsequently affect skeletal stability and functionality, however hardly documented. Hence, the purpose of this study was to evaluate the morphological change of the glenoid fossa 2years after bimaxillary surgery. A case series was performed including subjects diagnosed with maxillary and/or mandibular growth disturbances, who underwent bimaxillary surgery between March 2012 and November 2017 at the Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, University Hospital of Southern Denmark, Esbjerg, Denmark. The study variables were gender, age, and postoperative condylar resorption. Subjects were sampled evenly within subgroups with and without postoperative condylar resorption. The outcome variable, three-dimensional morphological change of the glenoid fossa, was calculated as surface distance in mm between superimposed preoperative and postoperative (2years) cone-beam computedtomography scans, and the glenoid fossa was spatially divided into 4 regions. Evaluation of glenoid fossa changes of more than one voxel (>0.3mm) and comparison of subjects with and without postoperative condylar resorption were performed by one-sample and unpaired t tests, respectively. Twenty subjects (16 women; 4 men; mean age= 27.6years) with Class II malocclusion and maxillomandibular retrognathia were included. The glenoid fossa changes (0.36mm) were significant (P=.021) and significantly larger in subjects with condylar resorption than in those without condylar resorption in the anterior-lateral (0.40mm vs 0.27mm, P=.021) and anterior-medial fossa region (0.48mm vs 0.26mm, P=.015). Significant morphological fossa changes were found 2years after orthognathic surgery, and subjects with postoperative condylar resorption showed a significantly higher degree of morphological change in the anterior glenoid fossa than subjects without postoperative condylar resorption.

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