Guest guest Posted March 28, 2004 Report Share Posted March 28, 2004 Hi Greda, I have had 4 jaw surgeries so far - two to correct my bite and two on my TMJ's. My TMJ problems stemmed from being born with an underdeveloped mandible which caused my joints to dislocate repeatedly when I was about 9 or 10. Fortunately (after hearing about others' bad experiences with TMJ surgery in the early 80's) the TMJ specialists I was seeing at the time always advised me to avoid surgery at all costs. However my joints continued to deteriorate and I had a lot of bone loss. I had had mainly an open bite as a teenager (large enough to easily stick my finger through when I was biting down) but that developed into an overbite as well that kept getting worse. By the time I had my first surgery, I had an almost 20 mm overbite. I was finally persuaded to do something about my bite after I saw numerous dentists, oral surgeons and TMJ specialists (including my pediatric dentist who had years earlier warned me away from surgery). They felt that the stress of trying to force my teeth together was making the joints worse and we could hopefully halt the progression of the arthritis through orthognathic surgery. After 6 years of braces, I finally had my first surgery in Sept 2002. The surgeon did everything possible to minimize further stress on the joints. He did the surgery in two stages. First, he advanced my mandible gradually by using distraction osteogenesis for total of 17 mm. Then in November 2002, he moved the upper jaw 5 mm (Lefort I). I finally had a perfect bite for the first time in my life. Unfortunately, it didn't last very long. Instead of getting better, my joints got worse. The condyles (what there was of them) rapidly deteriorated. Within 6 months, I had an 8 mm overbite and my lower jaw was deviated to the left. That was when I had my first TMJ surgery. My TMJ surgeon wanted to be as conservative as possible. He did a temporalis muscle (one of the scalp muscles) graft into the left joint to replace the cartilage. On the right, he salvaged part of the disc and sewed it back in place. It held for a few months and then my bite was off again and my opening was very limited. A CT scan showed that while the muscle graft had healed well and was holding, the left condyle was now completely gone. The right joint was fused and had avascular necrosis (dead bone). We had been hoping to put it off for years but now we didn't have a choice. I either needed a joint reconstruction or artificial joints. We opted for the joint reconstruction. It (theoretically) has better long-term results than artifical joints which last, at best, 10-15 years. Since I'm only 37, that would mean multiple surgeries in my future. In January, the condyles were reconstructed using distraction again. We achieved 15 mm of new bone growth on each side. I also had the temporalis muscle graft on the right. Right now, everything is holding up well and my bite is perfect again. Next week, the distractors come out and my surgeon will apply bone plates to hold everything in place. Then I will start aggressive physical therapy to get the range of motion back. Right now my opening is only 12 mm because the muscles have atrophied and there is a lot of scar tissue. I'm being cautiously optimistic that everything will work this time. My surgeon is so happy about the results so far that he presented my case at a recent TMJ conference. I hope he's right. I really hope the orthognathic surgery helps you and gets you relief from the pain. I can really empathize with the constant pain and getting tired of having surgery after surgery. Even if this doesn't work, I quit. No more surgery for me. I'll live with whatever the results are. If it's any consolation to you, the Lefort I was the easiest jaw surgery I went through, much easier to recover from than the TMJ surgeries. I wish you all the best. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.