Hello,
I had a sarpe surgery 3 months ago to improve my breathing, at first I wanted MSE but the orthodontist told me it would be a mess with my tooth implant (1-2) as it couldn't go back in place.
He sent me to a surgeon who did Lefort 1 on me, cutting everything (nasal cavity dissection, he did a pterygomaxillary disjunction and it is useless for sure https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27524385/ etc..)
My maxillary expander is a two parts device, I’m only turning the back part to keep my front teeth closed. But the front teeth are still opening anyway every time I turn the device, so the movement are very limited.
To this day I feel like nothing changed at all, my breathing is more or less the same.
Is it possible that, with all the cut he made, only the maxilla did expand but nothing happened to my nasal cavity?
"Unlike Surgically Assisted Rapid Palatal Expansion (SARPE), due to the absence of LeFort 1 osteotomy significant expansion of not only the maxilla but also the pharynx and nasal cavity can be achieved, which can be very effective in treating obstructive sleep apnea." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_palatal_expanders#Bone-borne_expander
Edit: Aesthetically, it seems like my face got really narrow below my ears and it is not a weight loss. It is like my mandible body and my gonions went inward, I have a sort of posterior hollowness. I also had a MSDO and I think it is the cause of my facial width decrease but I don't really know.
I am scared the surgeon removed some bones with the disjunction is it possible?
I found this https://academic.oup.com/ejo/article/27/5/512/473595 so I turned the device backwards but my mid and lower face are still really narrower
What can I do about it?
SARPE is for transverse maxillary deficiencies (when the maxilla is too narrow and needs to be expanded). Usually, the ortho puts in the device before a surgery and the surgery involves making some cuts aimed at getting at the palatial suture so that the 2 sides of the maxilla can move away from each other via the DEVICE aimed at that. The maxilla (or maxillae as the case may be) is 2 maxilla bones fused by the palatial suture. So, the doctor needs to cut into that a little for the expansion device to be used (by the patient turning the key to it).
The part that's concerning is the part where you say he sent you to a surgeon who did a full blown surgical dissection just to put the device in. To the best of my knowledge as it applies to minimally invasive techniques (yet no expert on all these devices), that type of extensive dissection isn't needed to put the device in and any extensive dissection should be reserved for doing the lefort which comes LATER in a SEPARATE surgery after the device has expanded the maxilla.
The article you cite bears that out, although a better title for it would be 'The NON necessity of.....' Yet both the extensive dissection and non extensive dissection achieve the expansion.
To the best of my knowledge, SARPE expands in sort of a V like way where the back of the palate (posterior) expands more than the front of it. Has to do with the palate (transverse discrepancy) being narrow closer to the back of it. But still the front of the palate (anterior) has some expansion which is why it's normal to get a SPACE between the front central incisors. Also, the 'roof' of the mouth (the palate) is also the 'floor' of the nose (nasal cavity). So, the nasal cavity is basically located above where the front of your palate is. OK.
What's really concerning here is that you say you are ONLY turning the back part to keep your front teeth closed. It's NORMAL and expected for the device to kick up a space between the 2 front teeth. After all, THAT'S the area closer to the (front) NASAL CAVITY. So, if your instructions were to turn BOTH parts of the device and you're not turning the front part of it because you don't want the front teeth to separate too much, THAT would be the most likely problem associated with the device not kicking up expansion closer to the front of the palate to expand more of the nasal cavity.
Not sure what to make of the wikipedia article you cite that says:
"Unlike Surgically Assisted Rapid Palatal Expansion (SARPE), due to the absence of LeFort 1 osteotomy significant expansion of not only the maxilla but also the pharynx and nasal cavity can be achieved, which can be very effective in treating obstructive sleep apnea." Not sure what to make of that because SARPE surgery is aimed at putting the device in doesn't really require a full blown Lefort to place it. Minimally invasive techniques can be used and later can come the full lefort.
What it sounds like here, sorry to say, is that you're reading med journals, have little to no med background to make the correct interpretations from them and making decisions on YOUR OWN as to WHICH way and which PART of the device to turn. Ya, that's what it sounds like. So,
you should go back to the doctor, tell him how you're turning the device to MAKE SURE you are FOLLOWING the DIRECTIONS.End of story.