Abstract

The main goal of this study was to introduce a novel three-dimensional procedure to objectively quantify both inner and outer condylar remodelling on preoperative multi-slice computed tomography (MSCT) and postoperative cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) images. Second, the reliability and accuracy of this condylar volume quantification method was assessed. The mandibles of 20 patients (11 female and 9 male) who underwent bimaxillary surgery were semi-automatically extracted from MSCT/CBCT scans and rendered in 3D. The resulting condyles were spatially matched by using an anatomical landmark-based registration procedure. A standardized sphere was created around each condyle, and the condylar bone volume within this selected region of interest was automatically calculated. To investigate the reproducibility of the method, inter- and intra-observer reliability was calculated for assessments made by two experienced radiologists twice five months apart in a set of ten randomly selected patients. To test the accuracy of the bone segmentation, the inner and outer bone structures of one dry mandible, scanned according to the clinical set-up, were compared with the gold standard, micro-CT. Thirty-eight condyles showed a significant (P<0.05) mean bone volume decrease of 26.4%±11.4% (502.9 mm3±268.1 mm3). No significant effects of side, sex or age were found. Good to excellent (ICC>0.6) intra- and inter-observer reliability was observed for both MSCT and CBCT. Moreover, the bone segmentation accuracy was less than one voxel (0.4 mm) for MSCT (0.3 mm±0.2 mm) and CBCT (0.4 mm±0.3 mm), thus indicating the clinical potential of this method for objective follow-up in pathological condylar resorption.

Highlights

  • Orthognathic surgery often creates changes in the location of the temporomandibular joint (TMJ)

  • Magnetic resonance imaging is used to determine the actual position of the disc, while multi-slice computed tomography (MSCT) and ConeBeam CT (CBCT) are used to evaluate osseous pathological changes at the condylar level.[2]

  • The reported incidence of condylar resorption after orthognathic surgery ranges from 1% to 31% depending on the defined criteria and various surgical and non-surgical risk factors.[19,20,21]

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Summary

Introduction

Orthognathic surgery often creates changes in the location of the temporomandibular joint (TMJ). These positional alterations may induce functional stress on the mandibular head, thereby causing condylar remodelling, which is considered to be a possible aetiology of skeletal relapse after orthognathic surgery.[1] When patients show clinical signs and symptoms of potential postsurgical condylar resorption, radiographic imaging is required to obtain additional diagnostic information to optimize patient treatment and to estimate the severity of the condition. High-resolution three-dimensional (3D) imaging is the standard radiographic evaluation tool. Methods to assess condylar resorption remain limited to two-dimensional (2D) measurements.[5,6,7,8,9] Or, when in 3D, inner trabecular structure is neglected.[10,11,12,13,14,15] To properly follow-up condylar changes over time, a precise and reliable diagnostic tool is mandatory

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