Abstract

The authors evaluated changes in position and angle of the proximal segment, including the condyle, after intraoral vertical ramus osteotomy (IVRO) with and without a Le Fort I osteotomy to verify whether displacement of the proximal segment could induce postoperative complications. Changes in condylar angle, ramus angle, and displacement of proximal segment were measured pre- and postoperatively. The position of the temporomandibular joint (TMJ) disc was examined pre- and postoperatively. Trigeminal nerve hypoesthesia in the lower lip was assessed bilaterally. The postoperative horizontal condylar angle was significantly smaller than the preoperative one on the deviated and non-deviated sides (P<0.0001). The postoperative coronal condylar angle was significantly larger than the preoperative one on the deviated side (P=0.0483). The postoperative sagittal ramus angle was larger than the preoperative one on the deviated (P<0.0001) and non-deviated (P=0.00005) side. Most joints with an anteriorly-displaced disc with and without reduction improved on the non-deviated side; 5 of 16 joints improved on the deviated side. Results suggest the position and angle of the proximal segment, including the condyle, could change after IVRO. This could be associated with symptomatic improvement in TMJ, and extreme medial displacement of the proximal segment could delay recovery from lower lip hypoesthesia.

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