If the surgeon is serious he should be honest about the situation and tell you that you need a revision if he thinks you do. Why? Because his entire profession and his position is a joke else and it would make no sense for him to practise at all. If you're ready to help patients with a bad situation before surgery, you should insist on helping your patients if they have a bad situation after surgery.
I know this is not always true and how it works, but this is what I have to believe to not lose faith in humanity.
If you mean that your orthodontist is supporting you in a way where he tells you it's in your best interest to have a revision, then I'd say it's a no brainer.
I don't think you have to wait 1 year for revision. Different surgeons may have different safety margins and it may depend on what you're redoing though. I've heard patients having the bsso adjusted pretty soon after surgery. I'm not sure what your revision would require, is it a full lefort fracture and then splitting the palate, or can they manage without lefort to distract it? If it's a full mobilization of the maxilla and a 3 piece lefort, it's actually a pretty big surgery. It seems like a small issue to fix, but it might involve breaking it all up.
But again, it might be that stability is fine with the orthodontic work. Try to have a good discussion with your orthodontist and understand the situation.
I feel like I’ve said this over and over, but my orthodontist and surgeon, as are probably all orthodontists and surgeons, are very vague regarding my bite. My orthodontist said it was a crossbite after surgery and is edge to edge now. My surgeon said “there is no transverse deficiency” at the last meeting. Now that my bite has improved even further with more time in orthodontics, how can I expect him to admit NOW that the bite is bad. It was worse a few months ago and he never admitted anything.
My ortho, on the other hand, finally told me straight up, but then he will say “well work on it.” They are not going to elaborate on that. They are trained to be positive, to manage patient expectations, to keep patients happy, and to work with the result given to them by the surgeons.
Why would he say “You need a revision now”. Professionals do not talk bad of other professionals’ work. Basically it is completely up to me to read between the lines and to decide if a revision is worth it. I do not expect anything else of my orthodontist. I understand now how the game works. You will only be given hints.
Also, just because my bite isn’t perfect doesn’t mean I NEED a revision. The question is more, how much do I personally WANT a revision. So my ortho has absolutely nothing to gain by convincing me I need a revision. In his mind, he probably sees this as encouraging perfectionist tendencies in his patients which can bring him headaches and lead to an unhappy patient who starts making a stirr and uses his name as the so called witness or expert testimony.
NEEDING a revision is a very subjective thing, nobody needs anything.
I’m trying to clarify because you keep thinking my ortho or surgeon is supposed to be not only 100% honest with me, but also 100% a perfectionist. Only in that case would they ever tell me I need a revision. But in their view, the bite is probably something more along the lines of “good enough.”