Applied Sciences (Apr 2022)

Evaluation of the Predictability and Accuracy of Orthognathic Surgery in the Era of Virtual Surgical Planning

  • Marta María Pampín Martínez,
  • Alessandro Gutiérrez Venturini,
  • Jorge Guiñales Díaz de Cevallos,
  • María Barajas Blanco,
  • Iñigo Aragón Niño,
  • Alvaro Moreiras Sánchez,
  • José Luis del Castillo Pardo de Vera,
  • José Luis Cebrián Carretero

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/app12094305
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 9
p. 4305

Abstract

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Virtual surgical planning allows orthognathic surgeons to design a surgical plan preoperatively and establish a personalized surgical protocol. This study aims to validate the predictability and accuracy of orthognathic surgery through a comparison of the three-dimensional (3D) models of the virtual planning and postoperative CBCT using free software (3D Slicer) on 40 patients who underwent bimaxillary orthognathic surgery. The distances of point A, point B, pogonion (Pog), and the first upper and lower molars, both in each axis (x, y, and z) and in the 3D space, were analyzed. The median of the distances in the mediolateral direction was the lowest, while the highest differences were found at point A and Pog in the anteroposterior direction (0.83 mm and 0.78 mm, respectively). Vertical differences were higher in the maxilla than in the mandible. In conclusion, we found that orthognathic bimaxillary surgery using virtual surgical planning was more accurate when positioning the bone segments in the mediolateral direction, using the information provided by the splint, as well as when positioning the mandible compared to the maxilla.

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