Hi everyone. I'm glad I came across this forum as I finally sat down to do some research for my surgery in 2 weeks.
Some background: I had malocclusion problems that I had orthodontics for when I was about 16. I'm not as clued up on the lingo as you guys are but I think I was class III. I don't know what I am now but my orthodontist is happy with my bite (I still wear a wire behind my lower teeth but the work is essentially done), which is by no means perfect aesthetically (my dental midlines don't match up) but I can cope.
I'm now 22. In the past couple of years I had the feeling that something wasn't quite right with my face, that it wasn't symmetrical. It was hard to pinpoint exactly where the problem was without relevant knowledge, and I've been told by friends the my asymmetry is not very visible. I thought it was just a variant of normal as most people have slight asymmetry in their face.
Here's my pic:
http://imgur.com/a/xldXqMy jaw swings to the right. I have a compensatory occlusal cant and my lower teeth point towards my left jaw. Looking from a slight angle from the left and right, my face looks quite different (I look like I have a longer face from the left due to vertical growth).
I work in the hospital and was spot diagnosed by a maxillofacial surgeon to have condylar hyperplasia. I went to see him at his practice, and have had a scintiscan (technetium) that determined my left mandibular condyle is still growing. So in 10 days I'm having a condylectomy to take the active growth plate in the condyle out. I'm in New Zealand and this surgery is through the public system as my insurance company wouldn't cover it - they say the problem was "pre-existing" (my jaw would have been growing since puberty, just never stopped). I'm lucky I guess because the active growth makes it a "medical" problem rather than purely cosmetic.
I trust my surgeon (the one that spot diagnosed me) as he says he treats patients with condylar hyperplasia in the region. And also because he diagnosed me within 10 seconds of meeting me, whereas the maxillofacial surgeon I saw when I was 16 did not
Sorry for the long background. Basically I did some research and saw the sort of stuff you guys went/are going through and it freaked me out a little. My surgeon said he would first do a condylectomy (no cuts in skin, done from inside mouth) to stop the growth. Then reassess appearance in 3-6 months and do any cosmetic procedures then (I think he was describing genioplasty +/- inferior border oesteotomy) as oftentimes taking height from the condyle during condylectomy (I'm having 1cm resected) swings the jaw back and corrects the asymmetry to a degree. Remodelling of bones due to changes in loading after surgery, and change in proprioception hence the way I hold my jaw also occur that offset the asymmetry too he said.
The condylectomy is no minor surgery, but he made the whole process sound quite straightforward. He also said I wouldn't need further orthodontics. I'm confused about that because I've had orthodontics to correct my bite despite the underlying jaw problem. If the jaw problem gets partially fixed, will my teeth still match up? Also this has been a long term enough problem that my left maxilla has tried to compensate by growing, as evidenced by the cant in my teeth.
Does what my surgeon's doing seem reasonable? Is it the case that my problems are not as serious as what some of you have, so is managed differently? Or maybe it's more of a case of the difference between insurance in the states and limited medical resources in NZ? I do not have any functional problems yet (although knowing the problem I have now, I sometimes feel pain in my left TMJ but meh), so it's more preventative and cosmetic, unlike some of you who need prognathic surgery for functional problems.
Anything that sounds alarm bells in your head in the management plan? I'm sorry about the long text. My less than adequate knowledge in this area makes it hard to be succinct and know what questions to ask. I just need some reassurance that I'm going down the right path I guess. If everything in the management plan seems reasonable I guess I'll just have to accept that the result won't be perfect unless I undergo expensive major surgery.