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Aesthetics / Re: Surgical Plan
« Last post by kavan on Today at 06:57:42 PM »
Thanks for this. Extremely interesting (I study art as well haha) - and I believe I have a lot to lose aesthetically, even with my relatively severe underbite, in due partly to the reasons you mention above.

Am I correct when saying that the inclination of the soft tissue below the base of the nose is mostly controlled by the inclination of the front teeth? If so, can this be reliably predicted with presurgical orthodontics?

In essence, are you saying that the key to how the maxilla is perceived in real life is the difference in angle between the vertical plane of the (lf2 minus lf1 area) and the lf1 part of the maxilla? Since that the defines where the light and shadow falls on the face under natural lighting?

Worth trying MSE + FM (I'm 19) to try pull the entire maxilla a whopping 1-2 mm forward?

What matters is the KNOWN which is that presently you look good and can get away without surgery. What I said about people seeing maxillary recession in 'real life' it isn't noticed in your case because in real life you are moving head and not standing still in profile. As to a visual of what something could look like with any surgical or ortho movement, have the doctor show it to you on what ever computer displacement program he uses to show approximate potential changes.  Also, when I advice to STAY AS YOU ARE, I don't advise on how to change things around.
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Aesthetics / Re: Can you give your opinion on my surgery plan?
« Last post by kavan on Today at 06:49:38 PM »
Doesn't reducing the vertical length of a face make the forehead look bigger in comparison to the rest of the face?

SIDE PROFILE. advancement of recessive midface  and lower jaw will not make forehead look 'bigger' in terms of more advanced. FRONTAL. advancement of recessive midface and lower jaw will not make your forehead look 'bigger' in terms of more advanced.

If 'bigger' means taller (higher) forehead to you, it won't make much of a difference in how tall your forehead looks since the advancement is IMPROVING THE REST OF THE FACE. Besides, there is always the option of hair grafts to lower the hairline if you feel your forehead is too high/tall.
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Aesthetics / Re: Can you give your opinion on my surgery plan?
« Last post by sienimies on Today at 06:22:02 PM »
The plan doesn't change your forehead. It's a double jaw surgery that advances your recessive midface area and also advances your lower jaw. So the areas that are NOT the forehead being ADVANCED would most certainly not make your forehead look relatively larger. Quite the contrary, the DJS advancement would tend to make the forehead look  less advanced by relative comparison.
Doesn't reducing the vertical length of a face make the forehead look bigger in comparison to the rest of the face?
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Aesthetics / Re: Surgical Plan
« Last post by mylittledog on Today at 12:14:05 PM »
Yes you have an underbite with some maxillary recession.It's only visible in profile. In 'real life', the head is moving and it would not be that noticeable. Front soft tissue  'light throw' looks great. That is to say, you have the type of max recession that looks good in the front because it's the type of contour (slightly concave right beside the nose) that collects and reflects light. A slightly concave area just happens to collect and reflect very well  (Leonardo's treatise on painting) and you have that to the upper medial cheek area and also to the philtral area.

You have a 'lucky' contour to the recession and for that reason, I would LEAVE IT BE. It works well for you.  So, NO to surgery.

Thanks for this. Extremely interesting (I study art as well haha) - and I believe I have a lot to lose aesthetically, even with my relatively severe underbite, in due partly to the reasons you mention above.

Am I correct when saying that the inclination of the soft tissue below the base of the nose is mostly controlled by the inclination of the front teeth? If so, can this be reliably predicted with presurgical orthodontics?

In essence, are you saying that the key to how the maxilla is perceived in real life is the difference in angle between the vertical plane of the (lf2 minus lf1 area) and the lf1 part of the maxilla? Since that the defines where the light and shadow falls on the face under natural lighting?

Worth trying MSE + FM (I'm 19) to try pull the entire maxilla a whopping 1-2 mm forward?

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Aesthetics / Re: Surgical Plan
« Last post by mylittledog on Today at 11:57:29 AM »
It looks like a case that could be solved by just moving the maxilla forward, but 8mm is a lot. It would change your nose. So he's probably right you don't need double jaw, but double jaw might produce a better result by splitting the difference in the movement of each jaw. Some people get sag under the neck when moving the mandible back, though, and there's probably some apnea risk, too. I'd say get some more consults and ask about these things.

Thanks. I have one or two more consults lined up where I will try to figure out other potential surgical plans. About DJS I'm not sure I would be able to accept a mandibular setback, partially from principle and also the potential complications that can arise from it.
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Aesthetics / Re: Surgical Plan
« Last post by kavan on May 02, 2024, 06:26:50 PM »
Yes you have an underbite with some maxillary recession.It's only visible in profile. In 'real life', the head is moving and it would not be that noticeable. Front soft tissue  'light throw' looks great. That is to say, you have the type of max recession that looks good in the front because it's the type of contour (slightly concave right beside the nose) that collects and reflects light. A slightly concave area just happens to collect and reflect very well  (Leonardo's treatise on painting) and you have that to the upper medial cheek area and also to the philtral area.

You have a 'lucky' contour to the recession and for that reason, I would LEAVE IT BE. It works well for you.  So, NO to surgery.
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Aesthetics / Re: Surgical Plan
« Last post by GJ on May 02, 2024, 03:56:54 PM »
It looks like a case that could be solved by just moving the maxilla forward, but 8mm is a lot. It would change your nose. So he's probably right you don't need double jaw, but double jaw might produce a better result by splitting the difference in the movement of each jaw. Some people get sag under the neck when moving the mandible back, though, and there's probably some apnea risk, too. I'd say get some more consults and ask about these things.
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Aesthetics / Surgical Plan
« Last post by mylittledog on May 02, 2024, 01:29:29 PM »
Hi, looking for some advice on a surgical plan / route
Would like to understand the aesthetic options given my Class III malocclusion

One surgeon I consulted with gave me his plan (SJS) which was a 7/8mm movement forwards, with slight Clockwise rotation around the ANS, and if I understood correctly a small downwards movement.

I'm particularly interested in preserving / enhancing the shape/projection of my nose since I know maxillary advancements make the nose project less, which may not be a good thing in my case.

Said surgeon also said DJS was completely unnecessary for my case, which I was happy about, but would like some other opinions about this.

https://ibb.co/x1JYTbh
https://ibb.co/rGKS3yg
https://ibb.co/SyvJpnQ
https://ibb.co/CJ25h54
https://ibb.co/3CY9qcZ

thanks :)

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Aesthetics / Re: Need Advice for Optimizing Face
« Last post by kavan on April 29, 2024, 07:55:18 PM »
Thank you very much for the thorough response.

Is there any way to do the jaw surgery I would need, that you suggest, without braces?  Or could it be done with invisalign or a similar solution?  Or if braces were absolutely required, what is the shortest amount of time I could have them?

If not, is there any way to replicate (even if not fully) the aesthetic results I would get from your suggested procedure with implants and/or other alternatives?

Braces can take over a year to get the teeth prepared for the jaw displacements in a maxfax surgery. They are needed to 'decompensate' a bite (to UNDO the present bite to prepare for future bite with jaw movements). Only an ortho who works with a surgeon could tell you how long or if invisalign. The nose and it's lack of maxillary support is key problem. Although there are implants that go under the nose base to project out the base of the nose, it doesn't hurt to consult with a maxfax surgeon about rotations along with advancements.

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Aesthetics / Re: Happy to hear your opinions
« Last post by kavan on April 29, 2024, 04:56:21 PM »
Thank you for your thoughts Kavan !

I have more to say but time's short and I'm in the middle of writing a paper for university. I'll come back to your comment when I'm done with my essay.

In the event I'm not around, I'll provide some more info that could explain why the guy hesitates to offer surgery. I'll also provide a diagram having to do with rotations.


1: The angle of inclination the lower incisor has with the border of the mandible looks to exceed 95 degrees. It's not uncommon for prior ortho to get 'bite rite' by flaring out the upper and lower incisors which might contribute to the lip 'stick out'. I don't remember the exact angle but just to say the maxfax docs like it to be near range of 90 to 95 degrees and not overly obtuse. So, maybe he doesn't want to pluck a pre-molar which would be needed to get the lower incisor with in the range of inclination they like it to have when doing an advancement.

2: Although the lip 'stickout' is made less and re-orients to rotate down and backward with CW-r, lack of tooth show along with complaint of lower face too short would require an OVERALL down graft (one to the entire maxilla) with net CW-r. Thing is that an overall down graft to ELONGATE the maxilla is not something all surgeons do (advanced skill set is needed). Just sayin' for short lower '1/3rd' and lack of upper tooth show, a down graft that spans the entire maxilla is needed. So, you would have to establish if he actually does them. By the way, an overall maxillary downgraft to increase the height of lower face can have net CW-R, net CCW-r or 0 net rotation if length of it is uniform throughout span of maxilla. When the front of it is longer than the back of it, it's net CW-r and when the back of it is longer than the front, it's net CCW-r. But no matter the rotation, what the grafts have in common is LENGTH added to lower 3rd of face. Monkey muzzle (chimp lip) has more to do advancing over an unfavorable rotation when they advance both the jaw and maxilla equally where they have to advance the maxilla TOO MUCH to because they DON'T do a CCW-r in a person who could need that in order to have the mandible advanced more than the maxilla. So, it's more of a matter of an equal advancement of both jaws in people who start with an unfavorable inherent rotation of the jaws which is not changed (via rotation) before hand. So, chimp lip is neither directly associated with CW-r or CCW-r pe se. It's directly associated with MORE advancement of the maxilla than a person might need when a doctor advances both jaws equally (linear advancement) to get a large mandible advancement and the maxilla goes along with the same ride.

3: Another thing that needs a graft of sorts is a genio that goes in the direction of downward and outward. It makes a bone GAP than needs to be filled in with a graft. So, maybe he doesn't do the type of grafts other docs do

4: Depending on how much you conveyed to the doctor that your bone structure was not as 'robust' as you would like,maybe he thought you were expecting too much from maxfax surgery. Bimax/double jaw surgery will do nothing for cheek bones. Although they can vertically elongate the maxilla for a longer lower 'third' of the face, they can't make the jaw bone itself more robust. That is to say, it doesn't actually make a vertically short mandibular body longer or more 'hefty'.

All that said, I think it could be a combination of your expecting to get a more 'robust' bone structure from maxfax surgery and also, possibility of pre-molar removal and also a question of whether or not he performs the type of BONE GRAFTING techniques associated with maxilla elongation and also a type of genio that goes down and outward also needing bone grafting. Like it sounds more in that direction than in direction of getting 'chimp lip'. I'm not predicting whether you could or could not get chimp lip. Just saying, I don't think that possibility is the salient reason for his being disinclined to encourage surgery.

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