Skeletal Stability of Le Fort I Osteotomy Using Patient-specific Osteosynthesis Compared to Mini-plate Fixation for Patients With Dentofacial Disharmony
- Conditions
- Dentofacial Deformities
- Registration Number
- NCT05340036
- Lead Sponsor
- Hassan Fahmy Hassan Alnimr
- Brief Summary
The aim of the study is to evaluate the Skeletal stability of Le Fort I osteotomy using patient-specific osteosynthesis compared to Mini-plate fixation for patients with skeletal class III malocclusion.
- Detailed Description
postsurgical relapse is one of the most common observations that have been reported after fixation of Le Fort I osteotomy cases.
Fixation systems with plates and screws are used in oral maxillofacial surgery for the treatment of facial fractures and orthognathic surgery cases. Although they have been used for decades and have become the standard treatment, the materials used in these systems may fail due to excess loading and other causal factors during the surgical procedure, including failure in plate adaptation and fixation to bone, material design, fabrication, and degree of purity of the plate material.
In the fixation system, non-customized plates of standard size are used, and are bent to adapt them to the distances required for planning orthognathic surgeries. Therefore, mandatory use of larger plates than those programmed for use in surgeries is required so that they can be bent to enable insertion. Moreover, there are variations in the number of screws required to retain the plates to enable better fixation. The folds of non-customized plates generate stresses that are minimized when using customized plates, because these plates are fabricated individually, with predetermined sizes for each patient.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- UNKNOWN
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 30
- Patients with skeletal class III malocclusion planned for traditional Orthognathic Approach and requiring bimaxillary orthognathic surgeries in which there will be Le Fort I osteotomy with maxillary advancement ranging from 2mm to 5 mm in addition to mandibular setback.
- Patients with no signs or symptoms of active TMDs.
- Highly motivated patients.
- Patients who refused to be included in the research.
- Patients with systemic diseases that may hinder the normal healing process or render the patient not fitting for general anaesthesia.
- Patients with intra-bony lesions or infections that may retard the osteotomy healing.
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Skeletal relapse of Le Fort I osteotomy Linear deviations between immediate postoperative and 12 months postoperative position Skeletal relapse will be assessed through measuring Linear deviations (DT) between the immediate postoperative (T1) and the 12 months postoperative position (T2) in Mimics 19.0 software using hard tissue reference points (A point, Anterior nasal spine, posterior nasal spine, Incisive foramen, Right side Greater palatine foramen, Left side Greater palatine foramen) in relation to three reference planes (Frankfort horizontal plane (FHP), coronal plane, and mid-facial plane (MFP)). Measurements from the reference points to the FHP indicated vertical deviation, to the coronal plane indicated anteroposterior deviation, and to the MFP indicated mediolateral deviation. measurements will be in millimeters.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Faculty of Dentistry, Cairo University
🇪🇬Cairo, Egypt
Faculty of Dentistry, Cairo University🇪🇬Cairo, Egypt
