Abstract

The purposes were to study the pharyngeal airway in patients with skeletal Class III malocclusion submitted to surgical orthodontic treatment and to correlate the alterations with bone movements. The sample consisted of multislice computed tomography images from 13 patients obtained before and 6months after maxillomandibular advancement surgery. The following measurements were obtained using Dolphin Imaging software (Dolphin Imaging, Chatsworth, CA): volume and area of the oropharynx, nasopharynx, and total airway, as well as the most constricted area, anteroposterior and lateral dimensions of the narrowest axial cross-sectional area, and airway length. The paired ttest was applied at a significance level of 5%. Sagittal displacement of the maxilla and mandible was correlated with airway alterations using the Pearson correlation test. Alterations in airway measurements were observed in all patients after surgery. We noted a significant increase (P<.05) in total airway area, oropharyngeal area, and anteroposterior dimension of the most constricted area, as well as a significant reduction (P<.05) in airway length. A significant correlation (P<.05) was observed between nasopharyngeal area and maxillary movement and between airway length and mandibular movement (P<.05). The results of this study suggest significant alterations in pharyngeal airway measurements when preoperative and postoperative periods of bimaxillary advancement surgery were compared.

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