Brandy's Journey
My personal walk through
Retronathic Jaw, Sleep Apnea and Overbite
Surgical Treatment
It was extremely difficult to find good background information on the various procedures I was going to be having, so I thought I would journal my experience in an effort to help others potentially going through the same thing. Management of a retronathic jaw, or a short or under pronounced jaw, is considerably different than years gone by. Previously, surgeons would fracture the jaw, advance it forward and wire it together; leaving the patient with snips around their neck in case of an emergency for six to eight weeks. I required surgery predominantly due to sleep apnea challenges versus the pure desire to change the aesthetics of my retronathic jaw appearance. The following is my personal impression of the journey of current surgically recommended management of a retronathic jaw and its sequlae.
Initial Consultation
Initial consultation with my oral dental surgeon involved discussion of the severity of my sleep apnea and retronathic jaw and the procedures indicated to help me. I was told I would need a SARPE and an RPE to prepare my mouth for a BSSO – what a mouth full, literally! A SARPE is an acronym for Surgically Assisted Rapid Palatal Expansion surgery, a RPE is a Rapid Palate Expander intra oral dental device and a BSSO is a Bilateral Sagittal Split Osteotomy surgery. I’ll expand on these as they come into my experience.
Last edited by Brandy; 07-15-2008 at 09:58 PM.
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