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Computational Modeling for Prediction of Acoustic Changes in Vowel Production Due to Orthognathic Surgery

Not Applicable
Conditions
Jaw Deformity
Facial Asymmetry
Interventions
Other: MRI examination
Registration Number
NCT01887977
Lead Sponsor
Turku University Hospital
Brief Summary

A computational model of human sound production based on high quality anatomic measurements and physical laws of sound propagation cannot be accomplished without a comprehensive data set including both 3D-images of the speaker's anatomy and the simultaneous recording of speech. Since the computational model has separate models for the vocal folds and the vocal tract, patients undergoing an orthognathic surgery is an optimal test object for the model development. Vocal folds remain unchanged while substantial changes take place in the vocal tract. Moreover, since the aim of the research is to predict acoustic changes in speech due to operations in head neck area, the orthognathic patient group is par excellence an example of such a prediction problem. If the model can be shown to give valuable information pre-operationally, many other patient groups could benefit from the results.

Detailed Description

Orthognathic surgery deals with the correction of abnormalities of the facial tissues. The underlying cause for abnormality may be present at birth or acquired during the life as the result of distorted growth or trauma. Orthodontic treatment alone is not adequate in many cases due to severity of the deformities. In a typical operation, the position of either one jaw (mandible or maxilla) or both jaws is surgically changed in relation to the skull base. The movement of the jaw position varies usually between 5-15 mm either to anterior or posterior direction. Such a considerable movement has a very profound effect on the shape and volume of vocal tract resulting detectable changes in acoustics. Although the surgery involves mandibular and maxillary bone, changes occur also in the position and shape of respective soft tissues and hyoid bone, as well. For this project, 20 adult patients (10 women and 10 men) undergoing orthognathic surgery will be enrolled. Exclusion criteria include diseases and conditions in which MRI examination is contraindicated (.e.g. pace maker), severe speech or hearing impairment, and other situations where the patient has difficulties with completing the tasks defined in the research protocol. Furthermore, patients to whom segmental surgery of the jaws will be performed in connection of orthognathic surgery are excluded. A specific pre-selection criterion for patients is the presence of numerous dental amalgam fillings that may cause artifacts in MR images.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
20
Inclusion Criteria
  • Healthy patients undergoing orthognathic surgery
Exclusion Criteria
  • Patients with conditions in which MRI examination is contraindicated (e.g. pace maker)
  • Patients who require several operations or segmented jaw surgery
  • Patients with cognitive impairment
  • Patients with numerous dental amalgam fillings that may cause artifacts in MR images

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Computational modelingMRI examination-
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Acoustic changes in vowel production of hte patients duoe to orthognathic surgery6 and 30 weeks postoperatively

a measurement of sound formants

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Anatomical changes in vocal tract due to orthognathic surgery6 and 30 weeks postoperatively

changes in vocal track dimensions

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Turku University Hospital

🇫🇮

Turku, Finland

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