In this position, both jaws should be ahead of the forehead. It won't become an overly ante face either, just balanced. If you look at pictures of even those with recessed jaws, they have a maxilla ahead of the forehead (the base of nose).
Right, when I talk about antefaces I mean significant prognathism. This is a natural feature among those of African descent, but I think an orthognathic profile (such as those shown in the images I posted above) is the most natural and aesthetic for Caucasians.
You had been given x rays before and they docs told you there was no issues? Or is this your own assumption regarding your bite being fine as it is? You should definitely look into it more and get some consultanting with someone like an Ortho as well. It looks like even with your bite being fine, the kind of shape your lower jaw and mouth have, could cause some kind of possible obstructive sleep apnea, or other issues down the line.
Well, I saw a Dentist regularly through my childhood and teens and they never suggested that I needed orthodontics. I also have no issues with TMJ, headaches, I can eat normally, etc.
Yes, I'm concerned about sleep apnea. I may already be suffering from it for all I know. In a perverse way, I'm actually hoping it
is an issue for me so that I can get my surgery covered by insurance (or the state) and thus save myself $50k+
To be honest, your facial structure looks like short face syndrome: deep labiom. fold, prominent chin, recessed lower jaw, poor cervico mental angle.
Really? I have a pretty long face -- long nose, long philtrum, etc. -- whereas the short face syndrome cases I've seen have the opposite problem of a vertically compressed appearance.
Note that I think you morph falls short on the upper and lower lips and the chin is still too projected relative to them. Sliding the chin down and back would mean less projection and more vertical length, both of which would decrease the sulcus. More advancement via bsso and lf1, though I do like the anteface look.
Yes, I didn't touch the lips in my morph. The orthodontics and sliding genio should improve the contour of my lower lip (and produce a far more pleasing labiomental groove) and the maxillary advancement should hopefully give my philtrum a nice concavity. I don't know if I could really reduce the frontal projection of my chin as I think I'm really relying on that to give me extra projection to my jaw. Obviously a witch's chin isn't ideal but I think it's better tolerated in males than in females.
I guess my main concern at this stage is the effect the surgery would have on my 3/4 and frontal aesthetics. The potential improvements to my profile are obvious (besides resolving possible functional issues) but I'm concerned that these may be outweighed by adverse changes to my face from any other view (which I would regard as more important). I think the main issue would be the cheekbones. I already have pretty shallow cheekbones, so moving my whole lower face forward while keeping my cheekbones in the same place is only gong to aggravate that. My current 3/4 contour is just about a straight line (at, I would guess, around 25% bodyfat). After moving the maxilla forward ~5 mm I would expect that my 3/4 contour would be decidedly convex, even at low bodyfat. The frontal view would likely suffer similarly. What do you think?
The other issue is the changes to soft tissue and the nose. It seems to be inevitable that advancing the maxilla causes the nostrils to broaden and the nose to become more upturned, the degree of change being approximately proportional to the degree of advancement. I found a really interesting paper on it:
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/51114020_Nasolabial_Changes_After_Maxillary_Advancement. This paper suggests that an advancement of around 5 mm should increase the alar width by roughly a third of a millimeter, which seems a bit optimistic considering some of the before and afters I've seen. I'm currently in the process of finding as many before and after photos as I can (that are comparable to my situation) in order to get a good idea of what changes might occur.
I've attached before-afters of a guy who had a pretty good result from only a 10 mm BSSO (from
http://pocketdentistry.com/19-aesthetic-benefits-of-orthognathic-surgery/). Not only is his profile improved, but his double chin is gone and his soft tissue in general is much improved -- he really looks a lot younger. Obviously I have maxillary issues that he doesn't have but I'm hoping my aesthetics would be similarly improved.
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