Hi folks,
After lurking intensely for a couple of weeks, this is my first post. I'm a late-20's guy, 5'9" 175 lbs, in reasonable physical shape, struggling to finish a graduate degree, with a slightly odd-looking face and a lifelong history of gradually-worsening depressive/spaced-out/fatigue symptoms. I am coming to believe that these symptoms are mostly the result of poor sleep breathing, and that the poor sleep breathing is rooted in the shape of my face and jaw (I'm pretty confident on the first claim, less so on the second).
PICSHere's a lateral ceph, which I got at a recent orthodontic consultation:
http://i.imgur.com/eFVTEHk.jpgAnd here's a profile:
http://i.imgur.com/AUQSvYz.jpgand a head-on:
http://i.imgur.com/bONDCFM.jpgFunctionally: My untreated sleep quality sucks, and as far as I can tell has always sucked. I snore/snort/gasp/"rattle" in my sleep loudly enough to wake others (but not myself) and have recently concluded that I have mild apnea/UARS (though despite several tests I can't seem to get a formal diagnosis, for frustating reasons involving my inability to sleep representatively under observation -- worst observed AHI was 10 with minimum O2 saturation of 85%, but it "didn't count" for diagnostic purposes). "Refreshing sleep" is not something I remember ever having experienced more than a few times before the past few months.
The sleep problems are partly alleviated with a jaw advancement splint (which I built myself because none of the medical people I talked to seemed interested in pursuing this after the first OSA-negative sleep study). It turned out that holding my jaw/tongue forward while I slept was better than taking the amphetamine which I got for my diagnosis of "inattentive ADHD" (I've also been diagnosed with unhelpful bulls**t like "persistent depression" and "idiopathic hypersomnia"). This jaw-advancement discovery was what got me thinking about my facial skeleton.
I bought myself a CPAP machine recently and I'm still experimenting with it, but no matter how I set it up it doesn't seem to help as much as holding the jaw and tongue forward does. It's hard to make it through a full night while using any of these uncomfortable interventions -- sleep quantity vs quality is a hard tradeoff that I haven't yet overcome.
Bite is fine, chewing is fine. I have all 32 teeth, and only one has any major issues (lower right wisdom tooth is crooked). I have never had orthodontic work, and am not prone to tooth decay (though I have some damage from nocturnal bruxism, probably related to the sleep breathing problem). I don't have any noticeable soft-tissue abnormalities in my mouth, besides slight enlargement of the tonsils and a fairly large tongue. I am somewhat prone to sinus problems, but I can usually breath through my nose alright (though I always breathe through my mouth at night unless I tape it shut). I have a deep voice for my size, and I speculate, from my incomplete understanding of the pharyngeal anatomy, that the corresponding position of the larynx doesn't help with the airway patency.
Besides the sleep problem, I have some other minor jaw-related functional issues:
- Left TMJ pops (painlessly) every time I open my mouth more than an inch. This seems to be the end of the jawbone actually popping out laterally, not just a disc displacement internal to the joint.
- Minor lip incompetence, which I can usually compensate without excessive mentalis strain, but probably contributes to my loss of lip seal and mouth falling open during sleep.
- My typical head/neck posture sucks, despite prolonged efforts to improve it. Partly it's because I'm slouching from being tired all the time (see above) and partly because standing more upright sucks my jaw uncomfortably far into my neck.
In my own assessment, I also have some jaw-related
Aesthetic issues:- My chin seems fairly weak -- indeed, the projection is short enough beyond my neck, and sufficiently angled up, that I cannot comfortably strap on a bike helmet without impinging on my neck.
- Though I am obviously not blessed with strong beard genes (I'll take the not-balding genes instead) I am consistently told that I look worse (or "like you're 12") when I shave.
- There is a minor but noticeable-from-the front asymmetry of the lower jaw. Ortho observed that lower incisor midline was offset from upper incisor midline. This may just be may a dental issue, however. Sometimes by biting hard on incompressible material between the right molars, I can make the right TMJ pop, and after that I can open my jaws without popping on either side for a few hours. My face is noticeably more symmetrical when this happens, but it soon relapses into asymmetry and the left joint starts popping again.
- My nose sort of turns up at the tip. I usually see this feature in *after* profiles from linear bimax advancement, so I assume a linear bimax would make that worse.
- I have relatively flat cheekbones/weak suborbitals,, but I'm not really concerned about that unless inasmuch as it would make any advancement of the jaws look apelike. I do think my skull looks a little strangely apelike already on the ceph.
- I barely show any teeth when I smile, as though the teeth are not pushing out from behind the soft tissues far enough.
My self-analysis at this stage:I strongly suspect the known functional issues (sleep, TMJ, head posture) are related to shape of the face bones themselves, but I've been wrong hundreds of times before and I could easily be wrong with this too. Maybe if I cut away at the tonsils or soft palate I'd sleep better, but I sort of doubt it.
I'm under no illusion that I am deformed. I don't want to be one of those unreasonable people saying they need the kitchen sink when it's clear to everybody else that they're making mountains out of molehills, so please check me right now if I "actually look fine", I'll believe you (almost). The orthodontist I recently consulted didn't see anything abnormal about my profile, occlusal plane angle, or bilateral symmetry -- however, to my eye, photos of many of his other "successful" patients showed pretty goofy skeletal structures.
It just strikes me that there's room for improvement aesthetically, and it would be great if the form and function could be improved together.
On the ceph, I measure the angle between the Frankfurt horizontal and the bite plane (at level of premolars) to be about 17 degrees, which I take to be a bit outside the normal range, but not extreme. I'd say the steep occlusal plane angle does not mainly reflect excessive anterior facial height -- in that case, I would expect excess upper gum show (actually have incomplete upper tooth show) and straight or humped downturned nose (actually have upturned nose). On the contrary, I think the steep plane is a more a result of deficiency at the rear of the maxilla, and corresponding deficiency of the mandibular ramus height
(though with this flat gonial angle, the ramus is barely distinguishable from the mandibular body). I suspect the deficiency in the posterior face/jaw might be what's cramping the airway.
I think my lower jaw needs to rotate CCW a little and come forward to get a jawline and some chin projection, but I can't see how to move the upper jaw forward much without pushing the already-prominent and upturned nose even further up and out. I certainly wouldn't want to impact the anterior maxilla and lose my teeth entirely behind my upper lip.
Maybe downgraft the anterior maxilla slightly and the posterior maxilla significantly? I don't know, I suppose that could make the lip incompetence worse.
On the "face" of it, does this look like a potential jaw surgery case at all? Should I email some photos to Arnett/Gunson or something? Or am I completely barking up the wrong tree? I'm pretty sure that straight linear bimax would be aesthetically worse, even if it were a functional improvement.
Thanks for reading, I know this was long.