Abstract

The incidence and degree of neurosensory disturbance of the inferior alveolar nerve, as well as its recovery course, were studied on 46 sides in 23 patients who had undergone bilateral sagittal split osteotomies, by means of subjective symptoms, light touch, anaesthesiometer and two-point discrimination. The degree of disturbance was classified into mild, moderate and severe grades by the threshold pressure shown in tests with the anaesthesiometer. The disturbance, which was almost exclusively limited to mild (37%) and severe (28%) grades, was observed in 67% of the sample at one week. The disturbance disappeared completely within one to three months postoperatively in most sites with mild disturbance, and within three months to one year in half of the severely affected sites. Although the recovery was delayed in the other half of the severely disturbed sites, the disturbance was of mild grade at one and a half years. The overall incidence of disturbance at one year was 15%. Computed tomographic examination of the ascending ramus showed that the narrowest width between the mandibular canal and the buccal cortical plate ranged from 0 mm to 3.2 mm with a mean of 1.6 +/- 0.9 mm (SD) and it was less than 1.2 mm in 91% of sites with a severe grade disturbance, whereas it was distributed in a range of 0.9 mm to 3.2 mm in sites with no disturbance or with mild or moderate disturbance. The importance of preoperative computed tomography to indicate the location of the mandibular canal and the use of a thin cement spatula for the osteotomy was stressed, to avoid or reduce postoperative development of neurosensory impairment.

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