Guest guest Posted February 11, 2004 Report Share Posted February 11, 2004 Hi , 17 mm! wow talk about taking the jaw travelling!!! What an overbite. A distractor? That doesn't sound like fun. What is involved in that? I like medical stuff...but have narcolepsy so thought it wasn't responsible to become a md myself - became programmer. 2 Muscle grafts/ where did they grab that one from? Necrosis...oh wow. Okay I am curious about this soft bone stuff and the distractors. Sounds very high tech, you must live in a large urban centre? Upper jaw surgery didn't change my upper facial structure too much. Straightening out my upper jaw did straighten out my nose. =hmm what do you mean? just the tip? I am trying to figure out if I should do the nose first, I want the chin to be on centre... But I know I risk another surgery if they displace my septum again. does the part after @ start with aol? in your email? Surgery one was a straight 5mm one side 2mm the other side BSSO. A very conservative overly conservative but I digress.. I was 2 months post partum and my surgeon felt sorry for me so ... But it corrected cross bite and most of my overbite (still have about 2-3mm but def. liveable) Surgery 2 was to have screws removed. I think because of all the post partum hormones I healed too quickly and unscrewed my screws. So they came out. My jaw is still a little off but hey I am thirty so I figure jaw definition is defn. sliding and it won't be terribly noticeable, that and this may sound terrible but with people being larger these days and having less jaw definition I think there is less emphasis on cheekbones and stand out bone structure. So surgery 3 should be a basic leforte 1 I believe and a genio. I broke my face falling down stairs at 14. Its been a long journey but hopefully it won't last forever. Now tell me about these distractors, is that easier on the nerve damage? I personally think about getting the bsso done again but my scar tissue is huge and I almost have full feeling back so its not worth it really. But the open bite needs to be fixed. I guess I healed at a different angle - or because the screws came out, hard to get a surgeon to critique their work. Or it would have been open to begin with and he thought I'd accept that. I can open 2 fingers still even with tongue depressors...insert jokes here But I imagine my upper jaw will be moved back a bit. I keep teasing my dh that he's getting a better model of woman than the one he bought. He's really supportive but most people think I am nuts, meanwhile I think anyone who wants to live with TMJ or bad bites without exploring the options is nuts. However I am anxious to have my face put back the way I remember it. *next could be the body too Ah well enough of me. Shiloh Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 11, 2004 Report Share Posted February 11, 2004 Hi , 17 mm! wow talk about taking the jaw travelling!!! What an overbite. A distractor? That doesn't sound like fun. What is involved in that? I like medical stuff...but have narcolepsy so thought it wasn't responsible to become a md myself - became programmer. 2 Muscle grafts/ where did they grab that one from? Necrosis...oh wow. Okay I am curious about this soft bone stuff and the distractors. Sounds very high tech, you must live in a large urban centre? Upper jaw surgery didn't change my upper facial structure too much. Straightening out my upper jaw did straighten out my nose. =hmm what do you mean? just the tip? I am trying to figure out if I should do the nose first, I want the chin to be on centre... But I know I risk another surgery if they displace my septum again. does the part after @ start with aol? in your email? Surgery one was a straight 5mm one side 2mm the other side BSSO. A very conservative overly conservative but I digress.. I was 2 months post partum and my surgeon felt sorry for me so ... But it corrected cross bite and most of my overbite (still have about 2-3mm but def. liveable) Surgery 2 was to have screws removed. I think because of all the post partum hormones I healed too quickly and unscrewed my screws. So they came out. My jaw is still a little off but hey I am thirty so I figure jaw definition is defn. sliding and it won't be terribly noticeable, that and this may sound terrible but with people being larger these days and having less jaw definition I think there is less emphasis on cheekbones and stand out bone structure. So surgery 3 should be a basic leforte 1 I believe and a genio. I broke my face falling down stairs at 14. Its been a long journey but hopefully it won't last forever. Now tell me about these distractors, is that easier on the nerve damage? I personally think about getting the bsso done again but my scar tissue is huge and I almost have full feeling back so its not worth it really. But the open bite needs to be fixed. I guess I healed at a different angle - or because the screws came out, hard to get a surgeon to critique their work. Or it would have been open to begin with and he thought I'd accept that. I can open 2 fingers still even with tongue depressors...insert jokes here But I imagine my upper jaw will be moved back a bit. I keep teasing my dh that he's getting a better model of woman than the one he bought. He's really supportive but most people think I am nuts, meanwhile I think anyone who wants to live with TMJ or bad bites without exploring the options is nuts. However I am anxious to have my face put back the way I remember it. *next could be the body too Ah well enough of me. Shiloh Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 11, 2004 Report Share Posted February 11, 2004 Hi , 17 mm! wow talk about taking the jaw travelling!!! What an overbite. A distractor? That doesn't sound like fun. What is involved in that? I like medical stuff...but have narcolepsy so thought it wasn't responsible to become a md myself - became programmer. 2 Muscle grafts/ where did they grab that one from? Necrosis...oh wow. Okay I am curious about this soft bone stuff and the distractors. Sounds very high tech, you must live in a large urban centre? Upper jaw surgery didn't change my upper facial structure too much. Straightening out my upper jaw did straighten out my nose. =hmm what do you mean? just the tip? I am trying to figure out if I should do the nose first, I want the chin to be on centre... But I know I risk another surgery if they displace my septum again. does the part after @ start with aol? in your email? Surgery one was a straight 5mm one side 2mm the other side BSSO. A very conservative overly conservative but I digress.. I was 2 months post partum and my surgeon felt sorry for me so ... But it corrected cross bite and most of my overbite (still have about 2-3mm but def. liveable) Surgery 2 was to have screws removed. I think because of all the post partum hormones I healed too quickly and unscrewed my screws. So they came out. My jaw is still a little off but hey I am thirty so I figure jaw definition is defn. sliding and it won't be terribly noticeable, that and this may sound terrible but with people being larger these days and having less jaw definition I think there is less emphasis on cheekbones and stand out bone structure. So surgery 3 should be a basic leforte 1 I believe and a genio. I broke my face falling down stairs at 14. Its been a long journey but hopefully it won't last forever. Now tell me about these distractors, is that easier on the nerve damage? I personally think about getting the bsso done again but my scar tissue is huge and I almost have full feeling back so its not worth it really. But the open bite needs to be fixed. I guess I healed at a different angle - or because the screws came out, hard to get a surgeon to critique their work. Or it would have been open to begin with and he thought I'd accept that. I can open 2 fingers still even with tongue depressors...insert jokes here But I imagine my upper jaw will be moved back a bit. I keep teasing my dh that he's getting a better model of woman than the one he bought. He's really supportive but most people think I am nuts, meanwhile I think anyone who wants to live with TMJ or bad bites without exploring the options is nuts. However I am anxious to have my face put back the way I remember it. *next could be the body too Ah well enough of me. Shiloh Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 12, 2004 Report Share Posted February 12, 2004 Hi Shiloh! Errr! I wrote a long reply last night but somehow the message got lost. Anyway, in my befuddled mind this morning, I'll try to remember what I wrote. > 17 mm! wow talk about taking the jaw travelling!!! > What an overbite. Yeah, it was huge. Partly it was from genetics (my mother and my three year daughter have the same overbite) and partly from the arthritis in the joints eroding the condyles. My bite was always bad but it just kept getting worse over the years. Unfortunately when I was first diagnosed with having TMJ problems as a teenager, the surgical technology didn't exist yet to fix my bite. If I had had it done then, then I probably wouldn't have the problems that I have now. We'll definitely get our daughter's bite fixed as soon as she has stopped growing. So your daughter also has an overbite, too? > > A distractor? That doesn't sound like fun. What is involved in > that? It's kind of hard to describe in words but here is a website that diagrams out the techniques. By the time I had the last surgery, my condyles looked like somewhere between the class IIa and IIb diagrams. http://www.klsmartin.com/MOD-line/molina.htm#Distraction%20Technique The distractors I have are a little different. Most of the device is under the skin except for the screws. Those are hanging out my cheeks near the jawline. The screws had to be turned twice a day for two weeks for a total of 13 mm of distaction. That part was very painful but now they're just uncomfortable. The first distraction I went through was to advance the mandible. The surgeon made a cut through my lower jaw just like he would with a usual BSSO and then placed the distractor across it where the plates and screws usually would go. Distraction is usually used for larger movements. My surgeons have told me they only consider distraction for movements greater than 10 mm in the lower jaw especially when they would otherwise need to use a bone graft. > 2 Muscle grafts/ where did they grab that one from? The muscle grafts are from the temporalis muscle which is in your scalp. The surgeon cut out a 1-2 cm piece out of the muscle above my ear keeping part of it still attached (to keep the blood supply) just above my earlobe. He then rotated it around into the joint space. It will scar down and form tissue very similar to cartilage. A few others here on this site have had the procedure done too with great success. > > Okay I am curious about this soft bone stuff and the distractors. > Sounds very high tech, you must live in a large urban centre? Yes, there are not a lot of surgeons in the US who do distraction. I happened to be lucky and live a few minutes away from the office of some who do. The procedure was actually pioneered in the former USSR by Dr Ilizarov over 50 years ago when he didn't have the more " sophisticated " equipment that we did in the West. He used distraction (also known as external fixation) to heal long bone fractures (such as in the arms and legs). The procedure has been used to lengthen limbs to correct a leg length discrepancy or to make people with dwarfism taller. Oral and plastic surgeons have adapted the technique to correct facial anomalies as well. > > Upper jaw surgery didn't change my upper facial structure too much. > Straightening out my upper jaw did straighten out my nose. > =hmm what do you mean? just the tip? I am trying to figure out if > I should do the nose first, I want the chin to be on centre... > But I know I risk another surgery if they displace my septum again. My upper jaw had grown down more on one side than the other so it pulled my nose toward that direction as well. My nose was noticeably deviated to the right and my nasal passages were very narrow so I never could breath through my nose. During my upper jaw surgery, the surgeon brought up one side more than the other to correct the cant. He also did septoplasty and enlarged my nasal passages by removing the turbinates (from the back of the nose). Now I can finally breath through my nose. I have heard of others who also had nasal surgery at the same time as their jaw surgery and others who were told to wait until they had healed from their jaw surgery before anything was done to the nose. I guess it depends on each individual situation as well the preference of the surgeon. I am very happy with the way my nose turned out. It doesn't really look different except that it is straight now and in the midline of my face. I didn't have to have rhinoplasty since there was nothing wrong with the size or shape of my nose. > > does the part after @ start with aol? in your email? It's att.net > > I was 2 months post partum and my surgeon felt sorry for me so ... Two months post-partum? No, you are the hero here. How did you ever take of your baby and yourself after surgery? My husband had to take our two and three year old daughters to his parents because it was too much for me to have them around in the first few weeks post-op. My two year is too young to understand and she kept wanting to climb and jump all over me and touch my face. She is very attached to Mommy and still wants to be held 90% of the time. > Surgery 2 was to have screws removed. I think because of all the > post partum hormones I healed too quickly and unscrewed my screws. > So they came out. What was that like? I would imagine getting the distractors out will be similar. I'll find out this afternoon when my surgeon wants to take them out. My jaw is still a little off but hey I am thirty > so I figure jaw definition is defn. sliding and it won't be terribly > noticeable. We are our own worst critics. What may seem obvious to us looking in the mirror, most people don't even notice. Most people are probably a little assymetric and aren't even aware of it. I'm sure you look fine even if your bite is still off. > I broke my face falling down stairs at 14. Its been a long journey but hopefully it won't last forever. Ouch! That sounds more painful than any of these surgeries. No, it won't last forever and I think you're past the worst of it. For me anyway, upper jaw surgery was much easier than the lower. Less painful but I didn't have much congestion because of the turbinectomy. That and I knew what to expect so there were no big surprises the second time around. > Now tell me about these distractors, is that easier on the nerve > damage? It is easier on the nerves because they are stretched gradually instead of all at once but I still have numbness I think, because of the distance involved. There is tingling so I'm sure I'll regain normal sensation eventually. I personally think about getting the bsso done again but my > scar tissue is huge and I almost have full feeling back so its not > worth it really. But the open bite needs to be fixed. I guess I > healed at a different angle - or because the screws came out, hard > to get a surgeon to critique their work. Or it would have been open > to begin with and he thought I'd accept that. I can open 2 fingers > still even with tongue depressors...insert jokes here Ha-ha! But seriously, why is your opening still so limited? Was your open bite present immediately after your BSSO or did it develop over time? Are you having any problems with the TMJ's? Did you have them evaluated to see if that is contributing to your open bite now or your limited opening? > > But I imagine my upper jaw will be moved back a bit. I keep teasing > my dh that he's getting a better model of woman than the one he > bought. He's really supportive but most people think I am nuts, > meanwhile I think anyone who wants to live with TMJ or bad bites > without exploring the options is nuts. I agree. You're not nuts at all. You're the one who has to live with the bad bite. It still amazes me how many people think we go through all this just for cosmetic reasons. I do think I look better now than I did before all the surgeries but still the reason I did all this was to be able to eat normally and save my teeth before I did more damage. Having supportive husbands does help so much but of course, they will eventually benefit from all this, too. ;-) > > However I am anxious to have my face put back the way I remember it. > *next could be the body too > Tempting, isn't it? Like, couldn't they just get rid of my pooch (still there even when I got down to 85 lb) and fix the effects of nursing two babies while they have me under? I've rattled on way too long. 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Guest guest Posted February 12, 2004 Report Share Posted February 12, 2004 Hi Shiloh! Errr! I wrote a long reply last night but somehow the message got lost. Anyway, in my befuddled mind this morning, I'll try to remember what I wrote. > 17 mm! wow talk about taking the jaw travelling!!! > What an overbite. Yeah, it was huge. Partly it was from genetics (my mother and my three year daughter have the same overbite) and partly from the arthritis in the joints eroding the condyles. My bite was always bad but it just kept getting worse over the years. Unfortunately when I was first diagnosed with having TMJ problems as a teenager, the surgical technology didn't exist yet to fix my bite. If I had had it done then, then I probably wouldn't have the problems that I have now. We'll definitely get our daughter's bite fixed as soon as she has stopped growing. So your daughter also has an overbite, too? > > A distractor? That doesn't sound like fun. What is involved in > that? It's kind of hard to describe in words but here is a website that diagrams out the techniques. By the time I had the last surgery, my condyles looked like somewhere between the class IIa and IIb diagrams. http://www.klsmartin.com/MOD-line/molina.htm#Distraction%20Technique The distractors I have are a little different. Most of the device is under the skin except for the screws. Those are hanging out my cheeks near the jawline. The screws had to be turned twice a day for two weeks for a total of 13 mm of distaction. That part was very painful but now they're just uncomfortable. The first distraction I went through was to advance the mandible. The surgeon made a cut through my lower jaw just like he would with a usual BSSO and then placed the distractor across it where the plates and screws usually would go. Distraction is usually used for larger movements. My surgeons have told me they only consider distraction for movements greater than 10 mm in the lower jaw especially when they would otherwise need to use a bone graft. > 2 Muscle grafts/ where did they grab that one from? The muscle grafts are from the temporalis muscle which is in your scalp. The surgeon cut out a 1-2 cm piece out of the muscle above my ear keeping part of it still attached (to keep the blood supply) just above my earlobe. He then rotated it around into the joint space. It will scar down and form tissue very similar to cartilage. A few others here on this site have had the procedure done too with great success. > > Okay I am curious about this soft bone stuff and the distractors. > Sounds very high tech, you must live in a large urban centre? Yes, there are not a lot of surgeons in the US who do distraction. I happened to be lucky and live a few minutes away from the office of some who do. The procedure was actually pioneered in the former USSR by Dr Ilizarov over 50 years ago when he didn't have the more " sophisticated " equipment that we did in the West. He used distraction (also known as external fixation) to heal long bone fractures (such as in the arms and legs). The procedure has been used to lengthen limbs to correct a leg length discrepancy or to make people with dwarfism taller. Oral and plastic surgeons have adapted the technique to correct facial anomalies as well. > > Upper jaw surgery didn't change my upper facial structure too much. > Straightening out my upper jaw did straighten out my nose. > =hmm what do you mean? just the tip? I am trying to figure out if > I should do the nose first, I want the chin to be on centre... > But I know I risk another surgery if they displace my septum again. My upper jaw had grown down more on one side than the other so it pulled my nose toward that direction as well. My nose was noticeably deviated to the right and my nasal passages were very narrow so I never could breath through my nose. During my upper jaw surgery, the surgeon brought up one side more than the other to correct the cant. He also did septoplasty and enlarged my nasal passages by removing the turbinates (from the back of the nose). Now I can finally breath through my nose. I have heard of others who also had nasal surgery at the same time as their jaw surgery and others who were told to wait until they had healed from their jaw surgery before anything was done to the nose. I guess it depends on each individual situation as well the preference of the surgeon. I am very happy with the way my nose turned out. It doesn't really look different except that it is straight now and in the midline of my face. I didn't have to have rhinoplasty since there was nothing wrong with the size or shape of my nose. > > does the part after @ start with aol? in your email? It's att.net > > I was 2 months post partum and my surgeon felt sorry for me so ... Two months post-partum? No, you are the hero here. How did you ever take of your baby and yourself after surgery? My husband had to take our two and three year old daughters to his parents because it was too much for me to have them around in the first few weeks post-op. My two year is too young to understand and she kept wanting to climb and jump all over me and touch my face. She is very attached to Mommy and still wants to be held 90% of the time. > Surgery 2 was to have screws removed. I think because of all the > post partum hormones I healed too quickly and unscrewed my screws. > So they came out. What was that like? I would imagine getting the distractors out will be similar. I'll find out this afternoon when my surgeon wants to take them out. My jaw is still a little off but hey I am thirty > so I figure jaw definition is defn. sliding and it won't be terribly > noticeable. We are our own worst critics. What may seem obvious to us looking in the mirror, most people don't even notice. Most people are probably a little assymetric and aren't even aware of it. I'm sure you look fine even if your bite is still off. > I broke my face falling down stairs at 14. Its been a long journey but hopefully it won't last forever. Ouch! That sounds more painful than any of these surgeries. No, it won't last forever and I think you're past the worst of it. For me anyway, upper jaw surgery was much easier than the lower. Less painful but I didn't have much congestion because of the turbinectomy. That and I knew what to expect so there were no big surprises the second time around. > Now tell me about these distractors, is that easier on the nerve > damage? It is easier on the nerves because they are stretched gradually instead of all at once but I still have numbness I think, because of the distance involved. There is tingling so I'm sure I'll regain normal sensation eventually. I personally think about getting the bsso done again but my > scar tissue is huge and I almost have full feeling back so its not > worth it really. But the open bite needs to be fixed. I guess I > healed at a different angle - or because the screws came out, hard > to get a surgeon to critique their work. Or it would have been open > to begin with and he thought I'd accept that. I can open 2 fingers > still even with tongue depressors...insert jokes here Ha-ha! But seriously, why is your opening still so limited? Was your open bite present immediately after your BSSO or did it develop over time? Are you having any problems with the TMJ's? Did you have them evaluated to see if that is contributing to your open bite now or your limited opening? > > But I imagine my upper jaw will be moved back a bit. I keep teasing > my dh that he's getting a better model of woman than the one he > bought. He's really supportive but most people think I am nuts, > meanwhile I think anyone who wants to live with TMJ or bad bites > without exploring the options is nuts. I agree. You're not nuts at all. You're the one who has to live with the bad bite. It still amazes me how many people think we go through all this just for cosmetic reasons. I do think I look better now than I did before all the surgeries but still the reason I did all this was to be able to eat normally and save my teeth before I did more damage. Having supportive husbands does help so much but of course, they will eventually benefit from all this, too. ;-) > > However I am anxious to have my face put back the way I remember it. > *next could be the body too > Tempting, isn't it? Like, couldn't they just get rid of my pooch (still there even when I got down to 85 lb) and fix the effects of nursing two babies while they have me under? I've rattled on way too long. 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Guest guest Posted February 12, 2004 Report Share Posted February 12, 2004 Hi Shiloh! Errr! I wrote a long reply last night but somehow the message got lost. Anyway, in my befuddled mind this morning, I'll try to remember what I wrote. > 17 mm! wow talk about taking the jaw travelling!!! > What an overbite. Yeah, it was huge. Partly it was from genetics (my mother and my three year daughter have the same overbite) and partly from the arthritis in the joints eroding the condyles. My bite was always bad but it just kept getting worse over the years. Unfortunately when I was first diagnosed with having TMJ problems as a teenager, the surgical technology didn't exist yet to fix my bite. If I had had it done then, then I probably wouldn't have the problems that I have now. We'll definitely get our daughter's bite fixed as soon as she has stopped growing. So your daughter also has an overbite, too? > > A distractor? That doesn't sound like fun. What is involved in > that? It's kind of hard to describe in words but here is a website that diagrams out the techniques. By the time I had the last surgery, my condyles looked like somewhere between the class IIa and IIb diagrams. http://www.klsmartin.com/MOD-line/molina.htm#Distraction%20Technique The distractors I have are a little different. Most of the device is under the skin except for the screws. Those are hanging out my cheeks near the jawline. The screws had to be turned twice a day for two weeks for a total of 13 mm of distaction. That part was very painful but now they're just uncomfortable. The first distraction I went through was to advance the mandible. The surgeon made a cut through my lower jaw just like he would with a usual BSSO and then placed the distractor across it where the plates and screws usually would go. Distraction is usually used for larger movements. My surgeons have told me they only consider distraction for movements greater than 10 mm in the lower jaw especially when they would otherwise need to use a bone graft. > 2 Muscle grafts/ where did they grab that one from? The muscle grafts are from the temporalis muscle which is in your scalp. The surgeon cut out a 1-2 cm piece out of the muscle above my ear keeping part of it still attached (to keep the blood supply) just above my earlobe. He then rotated it around into the joint space. It will scar down and form tissue very similar to cartilage. A few others here on this site have had the procedure done too with great success. > > Okay I am curious about this soft bone stuff and the distractors. > Sounds very high tech, you must live in a large urban centre? Yes, there are not a lot of surgeons in the US who do distraction. I happened to be lucky and live a few minutes away from the office of some who do. The procedure was actually pioneered in the former USSR by Dr Ilizarov over 50 years ago when he didn't have the more " sophisticated " equipment that we did in the West. He used distraction (also known as external fixation) to heal long bone fractures (such as in the arms and legs). The procedure has been used to lengthen limbs to correct a leg length discrepancy or to make people with dwarfism taller. Oral and plastic surgeons have adapted the technique to correct facial anomalies as well. > > Upper jaw surgery didn't change my upper facial structure too much. > Straightening out my upper jaw did straighten out my nose. > =hmm what do you mean? just the tip? I am trying to figure out if > I should do the nose first, I want the chin to be on centre... > But I know I risk another surgery if they displace my septum again. My upper jaw had grown down more on one side than the other so it pulled my nose toward that direction as well. My nose was noticeably deviated to the right and my nasal passages were very narrow so I never could breath through my nose. During my upper jaw surgery, the surgeon brought up one side more than the other to correct the cant. He also did septoplasty and enlarged my nasal passages by removing the turbinates (from the back of the nose). Now I can finally breath through my nose. I have heard of others who also had nasal surgery at the same time as their jaw surgery and others who were told to wait until they had healed from their jaw surgery before anything was done to the nose. I guess it depends on each individual situation as well the preference of the surgeon. I am very happy with the way my nose turned out. It doesn't really look different except that it is straight now and in the midline of my face. I didn't have to have rhinoplasty since there was nothing wrong with the size or shape of my nose. > > does the part after @ start with aol? in your email? It's att.net > > I was 2 months post partum and my surgeon felt sorry for me so ... Two months post-partum? No, you are the hero here. How did you ever take of your baby and yourself after surgery? My husband had to take our two and three year old daughters to his parents because it was too much for me to have them around in the first few weeks post-op. My two year is too young to understand and she kept wanting to climb and jump all over me and touch my face. She is very attached to Mommy and still wants to be held 90% of the time. > Surgery 2 was to have screws removed. I think because of all the > post partum hormones I healed too quickly and unscrewed my screws. > So they came out. What was that like? I would imagine getting the distractors out will be similar. I'll find out this afternoon when my surgeon wants to take them out. My jaw is still a little off but hey I am thirty > so I figure jaw definition is defn. sliding and it won't be terribly > noticeable. We are our own worst critics. What may seem obvious to us looking in the mirror, most people don't even notice. Most people are probably a little assymetric and aren't even aware of it. I'm sure you look fine even if your bite is still off. > I broke my face falling down stairs at 14. Its been a long journey but hopefully it won't last forever. Ouch! That sounds more painful than any of these surgeries. No, it won't last forever and I think you're past the worst of it. For me anyway, upper jaw surgery was much easier than the lower. Less painful but I didn't have much congestion because of the turbinectomy. That and I knew what to expect so there were no big surprises the second time around. > Now tell me about these distractors, is that easier on the nerve > damage? It is easier on the nerves because they are stretched gradually instead of all at once but I still have numbness I think, because of the distance involved. There is tingling so I'm sure I'll regain normal sensation eventually. I personally think about getting the bsso done again but my > scar tissue is huge and I almost have full feeling back so its not > worth it really. But the open bite needs to be fixed. I guess I > healed at a different angle - or because the screws came out, hard > to get a surgeon to critique their work. Or it would have been open > to begin with and he thought I'd accept that. I can open 2 fingers > still even with tongue depressors...insert jokes here Ha-ha! But seriously, why is your opening still so limited? Was your open bite present immediately after your BSSO or did it develop over time? Are you having any problems with the TMJ's? Did you have them evaluated to see if that is contributing to your open bite now or your limited opening? > > But I imagine my upper jaw will be moved back a bit. I keep teasing > my dh that he's getting a better model of woman than the one he > bought. He's really supportive but most people think I am nuts, > meanwhile I think anyone who wants to live with TMJ or bad bites > without exploring the options is nuts. I agree. You're not nuts at all. You're the one who has to live with the bad bite. It still amazes me how many people think we go through all this just for cosmetic reasons. I do think I look better now than I did before all the surgeries but still the reason I did all this was to be able to eat normally and save my teeth before I did more damage. Having supportive husbands does help so much but of course, they will eventually benefit from all this, too. ;-) > > However I am anxious to have my face put back the way I remember it. > *next could be the body too > Tempting, isn't it? Like, couldn't they just get rid of my pooch (still there even when I got down to 85 lb) and fix the effects of nursing two babies while they have me under? I've rattled on way too long. 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Guest guest Posted February 12, 2004 Report Share Posted February 12, 2004 Hi , Wow that is what I thought distraction meant but I didn't think they did that often because of visible scars? My daughter has an overbite - thanks to her grandmother's 5 dollar a day don't bother brushing your teeth summer.... I thought with my surgical hooks I looked like 7of9, but did people get a little freaked out by the frankenstien bolts? How did the distractor affect your teeth or was it too far back? > 2 Muscle grafts/ where did they grab that one from? The muscle grafts are from the temporalis muscle which is in your scalp. The surgeon cut out a 1-2 cm piece out of the muscle above my ear keeping part of it still attached (to keep the blood supply) just above my earlobe. He then rotated it around into the joint space. It will scar down and form tissue very similar to cartilage. A few others here on this site have had the procedure done too with great success. =so they used muscle to create psuedo cartilage? Facinating. My upper jaw had grown down more on one side than the other so it pulled my nose toward that direction as well. My nose was noticeably deviated to the right and my nasal passages were very narrow so I never could breath through my nose. +I think I might get the bones and septum done before the surgery and maybe if the tip needs any refining (rhinoplasty) get it done then as what you are saying makes sense and if it ends up crooked on the bottom then..... Two months post-partum? No, you are the hero here. =oh did I mention my surgeon refused to give me a script for pain killers or steriods....funny enough I didn't need more than straight tylenol. How did you ever take of your baby and yourself after surgery? =actually the two month old well they are pretty much still baby potatoes then, not grabbing too hard or trying to swat your face. My husband had to take our two and three year old daughters to his parents because it was too much for me to have them around in the first few weeks post-op. =lol a two and three year old are too much! I only felt badly that my baby really didn't year my voice for a bit. My two year is too young to understand and she kept wanting to climb and jump all over me and touch my face. She is very attached to Mommy and still wants to be held 90% of the time. =yeah I have a mama's boy this time. He's a 'insomniac' not really but compared to the nine year old who still sleeps 11 hours a night, mister 8 hours in total all day drives me batty - his father only does 4 on a regular day...... > Surgery 2 was to have screws removed. I think because of all the > post partum hormones I healed too quickly and unscrewed my screws. > So they came out. What was that like? I would imagine getting the distractors out will be similar. I'll find out this afternoon when my surgeon wants to take them out. We are our own worst critics. What may seem obvious to us looking in the mirror, most people don't even notice. Most people are probably a little assymetric and aren't even aware of it. I'm sure you look fine even if your bite is still off. =actually I think we all are, I've been watching the cnn faces, partly because half of them have invested in their faces and most of them are a little wonky. Yeah I feel like I have my vet status in oral surgery. The purple jaw? I am alot more prepared for the next one(s). Ha-ha! But seriously, why is your opening still so limited? Was your open bite present immediately after your BSSO or did it develop over time? Are you having any problems with the TMJ's? Did you have them evaluated to see if that is contributing to your open bite now or your limited opening? =open bite there right after but I ignored it! I also over babied my jaw. So I went from surgery 1 to braces off and surgery 2 boom. So the adjustment to full function was never expected to be made, then I started to get a little worried thinking it was a relapse. But realised it really wasn't. The second ortho (fiddlesticks') said that the open bite brought my back teeth together so like a wedge once they touched they can't open more...I was offered to have my teeth ground but they are micros at 5mm tall, so 3mm would have left me with what? I agree. You're not nuts at all. You're the one who has to live with the bad bite. It still amazes me how many people think we go through all this just for cosmetic reasons. =yeah lol. But silicone breasts are for self esteem I do think I look better now than I did before all the surgeries but still the reason I did all this was to be able to eat normally and save my teeth before I did more damage. Having supportive husbands does help so much but of course, they will eventually benefit from all this, too. ;-) =lol my husband would feel more benefit if I could stretch it more than 20mm > However I am anxious to have my face put back the way I remember it. > *next could be the body too > Tempting, isn't it? Like, couldn't they just get rid of my pooch (still there even when I got down to 85 lb) and fix the effects of nursing two babies while they have me under? =no kidding first baby for me one tiny stretch mark - ONE! Second... well I put on a few pounds trying to get pregant then quit working while I was pregnant stopped my narcolepsy meds so I slept all the time and worked my way or rather weigh into a 48 pound weight gain. Otherwise known as my myth of the 200 pound woman I was well over 200 pounds by the time I delivered the easter turkey (ten and a half pounds and 23 inches) not a diabetic either! I realised how many women who claimed to be 200 were probably closer to three. My brief pit stop at fat. So having breastfed for 44 months of my life...and yes the pouch...however I have plans for that when I am all done with the Bate family breeding programme...then I am going to have the leaky bladder lifted, the tubes tied, a tummy tuck complete with those muscles sewn up tight and a pani ;)And since the breasts are no longer needed for production then a full lift and reduction right beside my thyriod up touching my neck Ah the wish list...once the skin is gone its gone. Shiloh Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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