I am having jaw surgery done primarily to treat sleep apnea (AHI 10) aswell as bruxism. Of course the underlying cause is maxillary and mandibular hypoplasia. I have braces on and am preparing for surgery now.
I have consulted with a few jaw surgeons in the US, where I live. Out of the options I have, it seems that Dr. Gunson is one of the few doctors who will perform a posterior downgraft on the maxilla AND is experienced enough to make drastic enough movements of the jaw for all of this effort to be "worth my time".
His plan seems reasonable and well thought through. CCW rotation of the mandible will be performed up to the point where the front incisor teeth are just below the molars. He explained to me that this is the anatomical limit of a CCW rotation, as placing the incisors above the molars would cause TMJ. From there, he explained amount of CCW rotation achieved will dictate how much maxillary and mandibular advancement will be possible. Basically, a simple multi-segment lefort1 + BSSO + CCW rotation case
I appreciate his plan because he has not presented arbitrary numbers in mm of advancement as a limit to the forwards movement, he has clearly demonstrated that he would be taking me to the anatomical limit of possible forwards growth through achieving as much CCW rotation as possible. For this reason I've chosen him to carry out my surgery.
I have requested that Dr. Gunson put his effort into expanding the airway as much as possible, with aesthetics/ balance being a low priority. My main goal with this surgery is to gain as large of an airway as possible.
My main concern lies here: I understand that as a result of my lower jaw deficiencies, my entire infraorbital plane is also recessed. In advancing the maxilla and mandible, I only stand to accentuate that existing recession. Given that my aim is to advance & rotate the lower jaws as much as anatomically possible, it seems I have extra reason to be concerned about this since I am aiming for results that most other jaw surgeons cannot provide & therefore have not been documented extensively. While aesthetics are a low priority for me, I would like to avoid looking worse as a result of this surgery. It seems that some sort of midface augmentation is required to counteract this imbalance introduced by the advancement of the lower jaws.
Dr. gunson provides patients with a cheekbone augmentation proceedure as an optional part of his jaw surgeries. The HA paste will eventually become part of my bone, and from what I can tell it will avoid the goofy puffed look of implants that comes from silicone lying ontop of soft tissue. The major benefit for me, however, is that Dr. Gunson would be able to complete it at the same time he would be performing my double jaw surgery. I would avoid the need to have a separate surgery for something I don't want to worry or think about in the first place.
I do have concerns about Dr. Gunson's abilities to complete this midface augmentation, however. I was hoping some of you could chime in since I noticed that atleast one member here has had midface HA paste augmentation done with Dr. Gunson.
Red flags for me include that Dr. Gunson refers to the procedure as 'cheekbone augmentation', which implies he is not addressing the overall recession of the midface but rather only augmenting parts where the zygoma most frontally protrudes. This would obviously cause aesthetic issues if the other areas of recession, mainly the infraorbital rims, are not addressed. Since a 'clockwise' rotated posture of the infraorbital complex is implicit to recession, it seems as though augmenting only the cheekbones would cause a visual appearance of low-set cheekbones and emphasize recession of the infraorbital rims.
The experience of the other individual on this forum who had this procedure with Dr. Gunson seems to exactly confirm this theory.
I am trying to weigh the risks of the HA paste cheekbone augmentation procedure with Dr. Gunson. First and foremost, I would like to know from others who have experience with it that it will atleast not make me look worse. If that is the case, I think I am inclined to accept the shortcomings of the procedure for its convenience. Again, my main goal is simply to avoid looking deformed given my (more) unique request of maximum forwards movement at the cost of aesthetics. I would love to hear the opinions of those who have gone through/ considered this procedure as to whether, in my specific case & for my expectations, this HA paste midface augmentation is worth doing or if I would be safer off (aesthetically speaking) skipping it.
Attached are my photos/ scans for your evaluation. I apologize for the lack of a traced CEPH scan, since my posterior downdraft will be determined by my dental anatomical limits I hope the untraced CEPH attached will suffice.
https://imgur.com/a/RszIo9y