
Surgical-orthodontic treatment of a skeletal class III malocclusion
Author(s) -
Radha Katiyar,
GK Singh,
Divya Mehrotra,
Alka Singh
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
national journal of maxillofacial surgery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2229-3418
pISSN - 0975-5950
DOI - 10.4103/0975-5950.79217
Subject(s) - medicine , orthognathic surgery , malocclusion , orthodontics , occlusion , context (archaeology) , dentistry , sagittal plane , osteotomy , surgery , paleontology , biology , radiology
For patients whose orthodontic problems are so severe that neither growth modification nor camouflage offers a solution, surgery to realign the jaws or reposition dentoalveolar segments is the only possible treatment option left. One indication for surgery obviously is a malocclusion too severe for orthodontics alone. It is possible now to be at least semiquantitative about the limits of orthodontic treatment, in the context of producing normal occlusion as the diagrams of the "envelope of discrepancy" indicate. In this case report we present orthognathic treatment plan of an adult female patient with skeletal class III malocclusion. Patient's malocclusion was decompensated by orthodontic treatment just before the surgery and then normal jaw relationship achieved by bilateral sagittal split osteotomy.