Lol I already told you what the problem was. There is nothing more to see. Ben went to another surgeon who took Cephs and pinpointed why the surgery gave a bad result. There is no need to be vague and say we have no way of knowing. That’s already been figured out. He assumed a chin wing would work out well for him given that the drop down would be at the back, not the front. SJ obviously got a drop down at the back, same with Optimisitc, Ben did not.
Is it not clear to you that the problem has less to do with SJs promotion of the CW or Optimisitc’s awesome information processing abilities and more to do with the fact that Ben’s surgeon messed up? That’s the point I am trying to convey here.
Ben got the majority of his money back. I may be wrong but is that even possible to do if the CORRECT procedure was performed and the patient just happened to be dissatisfied? That’s probably only going to happen if the surgeon admits he did something extraneous, wrong, out of the ordinary, unexpected etc. So that is proof that there is more to the story here.
You seem to want to muddy my point in an effort to dismiss the CW procedure altogether.
You muddy your own points. Some examples of your other conclusions:
Some of your other conclusions:
That may be true but consider that he underwent a side wing that vertically dropped his ramus for the sole purpose of squaring his jaw,
No, it's the chin wing that vertically drops the BORDER of the mandible and in his (SJ's) case to make LESS the MP. The side wing, AFTER THAT is used to square out the jaw.
...... My jawline is steep but not severely so, so implants or CW could fix that no problem.
This after you're told having a standard BSSO cut IS a problem with a chin wing?
..... I actually don’t even want a CW but a side wing.
Same as saying you only want the second step of something that's contingent on the first step being done. For a side wing not to stick up close to the ears in someone who is NOT a LOW MP angle patient, one FIRST needs the CW to rotate and drop down the border of the mandible.
Visually speaking I’m not sure why a BSSO would make a side wing harder, chin wing yeah I can understand because you’re cutting further down where the BSSO cut was made, which is probably what he means by “the border is destroyed with BSSO,” but with SW the cut is at the back only, I.e there’s no sliding forward movement or anterior mandible dropdown needed in my case as that will be accomplished with my genio and BSSO. I just want a wider, squarer jaw at the back
So, exercise in futility to provide visuals. A cut from the front needs to be done to get to the back.
I guess the next thing to determine is why some BSSO cuts are preferred to others and why. Is it arbitrary? Does it depend on the surgeon?
Dr. Z told you why and ample visual info was provided on the board to this regard.
This was Dr. Z’s explanation.....
“if the distance after conventional BSSO from the lower border to the nerve is too small Side Wing or Chin Wing are not possible anymore. And: Small segment (makes for ?) difficult fixation, higher risk of resorption, possible step in Jaw Line.”
The latter part I think was in response to me asking if he could segment only a small part of the back jaw for the side wing. So it seems the real issue is the distance from lower border to nerve? But isn’t that the case even if you don’t get a BSSO? I’m confused.
Only a small segment can be moved in either chin wing or side wing if the lower border of the mandible is too close to the nerve. But to do a side wing on a near high angle patient, one needs the chin wing first to lower the angle and then the side wing. No small segments even with no BSSO.
You got ruined goinal angles because the surgeon segmented the wrong section of your mandible. Hard to believe, but he messed up. CW is going to blunt your angels but a side wing should not. How could it ?
CW only blunts the angles if the angles have to be brought forward in the act of advancing the chin. If the movement is just a downward drop with CCW rotation to the back of the mandible, there is no blunting. If there is blunting of the angles when the whole chin wing segment is advanced forward to include chin advancment, a SECOND operation is done to move the part of the angle back, pry it outward for a side wing and also put a bone BUTRESS between the GAP doing that makes. It is not a thing of 'just getting a side wing ONLY'.
There is a user here, Optimistic, that apparently had great results with a side wing.
That user got both the chin wing and the side wing as the second operation and he had NO BSSO. I attribute his success to his having a good ability to PROCESS INFORMATION (he's smart) and having the ability to apply it to himself correctly to make the right decision. He was able to FIGURE OUT all of the above with little help from others and did it without confusion and faulty conclusions.
If after all that you still don't understand why you just can't have a 'side wing', I GIVE up and I shall leave you to your own devices to figure out for yourself what will work for you and what won't.
Be my guest and conclude as you like about Ben and disregard SJ's stuff factored into to his being attracted to getting a chin wing. I'm NOT 'dismissing' the CW procedure altogether. I just think that people who actually UNDERSTAND how it works are the best candidates for it.