Are the doctors you consulted with who gave you their VSP plans going to be using the custom ones on you?
I have asked actually, but got a bit ambigious answear. I asked if custom plates was used for surgery, and got something like
-Yes, we have a medical 3d printer which creates custom made pieces for every surgery.
But to me that seems like a bit too general response for a specific question about custom PLATES. I know they use a medical printer to print custom splints, which is something else. I'm not sure if such printer is even capable of printing surgical plates and guides.
How I see it, the splint guides the occlusion. You make a custom splint which fits to the teeth, and fixate the bite and the maxillomandibular complex. Custom plates would be an additional step to guide the displacement of the complex in relation to the skull.
My comprehension is that none of the big name surgeons I've heard of use custom plates.
The comfort with custom plates for a patient would be that it seems like you don't really need a very good surgeon, as it would be to just follow the guides. I think quantifying and making the process easy is something good. I mean, creating a VSP actually don't seem very hard if you understand the basics, and if you also can make custom plates that any surgeon can use, then it seems like a great step forward for jaw surgery. There is at least one thing you don't wish to hear or notice after a surgery as a patient, and it's that the result doesn't correspond to the plan, and have it explained with how hard it is to operate with more accuracy. I mean, you want what the predefined plan showed you,