Great to see a surgeon participating in discussions. I would like to see that more often, but I would understand surgeons don't want to post here under there actual name.
I think anybody giving medical advice should use their real name.
On the other hand, it would be great if surgeons would share their knowledge openly, online. Many surgeons could learn from eachother, i have the feeling there isn't much communication between surgeons.
I think you are probably right. Multiple reasons for that. Congresses and symposia are mainly places to show off, especially in some subspecialties where money (the future of your practice, employees, and your family) can be at stake. It is difficult to choose to really train your competitors. Besides, competitors maybe do not want to be trained, accept the protocol or they might not be skilled surgeons! Every surgeon thinks that they are better and when we learn something new we always try to adapt it to our own previous beliefs and conceptions of the problem. And materials and instruments are a problem, too. We think we can do the same technique with the sutures or instruments we already have (unless it becomes pretty obvious that it can't be done... I mean nobody is going to do laser surgery with no laser... but might try to use another machine like a Bovie). And we don't like to be told what to do. We are always the best, always right, everybody else is wrong. This does not happen only in surgery, though... Orthodontics is even worse.
Thank you Sergio for addressing our questions and sharing your experience. Its extremely valuable to us and to the body of information available to the public regarding these procedures to have a clinician step in and clarify or explain certain concepts. I see it as a great service to the public.
I enjoyed reading your thoughts on the topic and would encourage you to continue to contribute in any way you feel appropriate.
Thank you, I will re-read these words when I need to read them.
There's an interesting dynamic nowadays between clinical practitioners and the public due to the access to information phenomena presented by the internet (places like this board as well). I can understand why they are generally hesitant to post. On the public side, we have such a vast and ever-evolving body of knowledge available to us, that no clinician could ever possibly keep up with all the latest research and papers coming out of universities around the world. On the clinician's side, they have the practical EXPERIENCE and APPLIED KNOWLEDGE which no amount of research and reading papers online could ever give. It creates a disparity between "the research shows..." and "In my clinical experience...".
Research in surgery is very very difficult, this is not like testing a vaccine or a new drug. No control groups, no randomisation. And it is more difficult in orthognathic surgery. A lot of possible biases, orthodontists also involved.... There are way to many factors that also affect the extrapolation of the results.
Is IMDO purely linear? Can it be used to achieve CCW rotation?
No if you mean a pure CCW in a patient with a good class I presurgical bite where the tip of the upper incisors act as the pivot point and no anterior impaction is done. IMDO is limited by the overjet.
But it can be used in the context of a CCW rotation with a Le Fort I that advances the maxilla and does a CCW by means of anterior impaction and a posterior descent, and with a curved osteotomy a posterior graft is not necessary and it's even worse to use it. But maxillary/midfacial expansion has to be done too in IMDO, remember. preop maybe? or a 2-piece Le Fort. I would probably try to go for the preop with a MARPE but its success rate diminishes with the age and becomes unpredictable in adults (over 25). But it's always possible to try, if it doesn't work then a 2-piece Le Fort along with the CCW... with CAD-CAM plates, otherwise it's too unstable.
Sergio, I just want to say thank you for taking time and sharing your insights here.
You are welcome.
Sergio, is there any major, active research taking place to advance distraction so it's as accurate as traditional surgery? If so, who is doing it? If not, why aren't huge research grants/funds being allocated to this? Patients would want distraction over traditional surgery. Do you think it ever becomes the gold standard, and if so, how long out is that?
Doing research is very difficult, very biased and a lot of times very dishonest. How many prospective patients are told that the risk of having some type of nerve damage in the mandible is 5 %? or 10 %? Those figures are the most heard in preop consultations, and they are based on actual research... and, to be honest.... what is the real outcome? And what does damage mean? total numbness? paraesthesia? hypoaesthesia? measured how? by the surgeon? self-reported? does everybody complain the same way?... oh, come on...
Personally, I do not like researching, I am a surgeon, not a researcher. Although the clinical data of previous IMDO patients is there, so I suppose retrospective research could be done, theoretically, but research would lead to conclusions with difficult interpretation. And with nowadays regulations about the access of clinical data, research is more and more difficult, even retrospective research. I do not have enough experience to provide a big sample though, but I am very happy with the results on my patients, although my IMDO patients until now are teenagers I wouldn't mind operating a young adult after what I am seeing. But it is very difficult for an adult to understand the advantages of IMDO over BSSO in large mandibular advancements, even more difficult than it is for parents to let a surgeon operate on their kid while there are orthodontists claiming that they can grow the mandible of a grown kid (mandibles do not grow much after age 12) without surgery, which is not true. They end up doing camouflage, messing with the TMJs and all to obtain an unstable and very suboptimal result.
By the way, I forgot to say that would probably describe the effects of IMDO surgery as a
mandibular enlargement, not only advancement, and the full IMDO protocol as
maxillomandibular enlargement. The reason for this is that the active phase of the IMDO protocol enlarges the body of the mandible and it widens it, skeletally. It means that the upper arch must be expanded more than with a BSSO (any mandibular advancement produces a relative/false expansion, that is why upper expansion has to be done along with any mandibular advancement, even non surgical ones. And, in my opinion, it is much better if we do an upper skeletal expansion instead of a dental expansion. And even much better with MSE or other MARPE devices, because that type of expansion is a midfacial expansion compared to the maxillary expansion produced by SARPE, DOME or 2- 3 piece Le Fort.
One surgeon I talked to told me he did quite a lot with my surgeon (of all people) about 20 years ago. He said you basically end up with multiple surgeries instead of one and it can get complicated for non-linear movements. So they reserve it for syndromal cases where movements must be huge.
That was my understanding about distraction, too. I had no previous experience with mandibular distraction when I started with IMDO though 2.5 years ago, so I can't compare. But when I read the papers / books on distraction and I see photos and videos or other distraction patients I think I understand why so many things can go south... and actually do.
Yeah.
I'd like to know when that will all change and they figure out how to move in all planes with accuracy.
There are too many factors that precludes a 100 % accuracy in any technique, and specially distraction. The reason why IMDO works really well on teens is because postop orthodontics are easier, callus molding is easier so the surgical inaccuracy is compensated by other factors.
Mandibular enlargement is done slowly (distraction is 1 mm per day) while condyles rest in the fossae in their comfiest position, this happens in teens and adults (I do not have to place the condyle during the operation). Small midline corrections can be done... occlusal interferences happen at the end of the distraction period... then orthodontics play an important role. And yes, calluses take more time to heal in adults. Adults do not heal as fast as teenagers and the social / work life of an adult makes IMDO an uncomfortable treatment. But some adults accept these drawbacks and risks in exchange for the advantages.
By the way there are several recent research papers there on how accurate conventional orthognathic surgery is even with computer planned software, comparing the outcomes with the planned surgery (for instance,
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29275075 or
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31034793 ) You might want to dig a little bit into it.
Let me add this, no disrespect intended... but I have got the feeling that many people in this forum think of orthognathic surgery as operating casts or 3D models. Many active users here believe 3D planning is almost a synonym of getting good results and, believe me, it is not. Computer software is coded by humans, based on information given by other humans, and then another human will do the operation in... another human! We do not operate x-rays or rendered images. Clinical planning is way more important than software planning.
The next step in the ladder or accuracy in orhognathic surgery is the use of CAD-CAM plates and guides. That is not computer planning, that is actual computer personalised surgery, where the planning, if done correctly, can be transferred with the highest degree of accuracy possible. But, again, we need to plan the intervention, design the plates (not every surgeons would like to use the same basic type of design and follow the same principles when designing them, or use the same grade of titanium) and then perform it... human on human. And this type of approach is veeery expensive. Interventions take longer, incisions and detachments are larger... And large advancements or large CCWs will be always be a challenge even with this approach. Soft tissues and TMJs do not like these large movements. So IMDO can always be useful in some patients, as soft tissues adapt better to slow movements (they stretch slowly following the underlying bone)
This should be getting the majority of research money.
Let me tease you a little bit (I know you did not mean this) don't you think there are more important fields of medicine to spend research money on?