Objective To study the relationship between severity of skeletal Class Ⅲ malocclusion and the patient's emotional status, as well as motivation for seeking surgical correction and satisfaction with the outcome o...Objective To study the relationship between severity of skeletal Class Ⅲ malocclusion and the patient's emotional status, as well as motivation for seeking surgical correction and satisfaction with the outcome of the surgery Methods One hundred and forty consecutive Chinese patients with skeletal Class Ⅲ malocclusion who had been treated with a combined orthodontic and surgical approach were studied Sixty seven percent (40 males and 54 females) responded to a questionnaire Fifty four percent had two jaw deformities, 32% mandibular hyperplasia and 14% maxillary hypoplasia Surgical procedures: 77% received two jaw surgeries, 15% maxillary advancement and 8% mandibular setback This was a retrospective study based on questionnaires with numerical scale ranked answers (0: not at all; 1: a little; 2: moderately; 3: quite a bit; and 4: extremely) Results ANB angle was significantly negatively correlated with feelings about the nickname related to their facial problems (embarrassment: r =-0 30, P <0 01; worn out r =-0 32, P <0 01; angry r = -0 24, P <0 05) ANB angle also had a significant negative correlation with the reasons for having the surgery (pressure from their friends: r =-0 21, P <0 05, and referred by physician: r =-0 24, P <0 05) Changes in life style as a result of surgery were significantly negatively correlated with the ANB angle before treatment, positive influence on relationships with the opposite sex ( r =-0 25, P <0 05), positive influence in social activiies ( r =-0 22, P <0 05) Conclusion The psychological status before surgery and the outcome following orthognathic surgery in patients with skeletal Class Ⅲ malocclusion were closely related to severity of the malocclusion展开更多
文摘Objective To study the relationship between severity of skeletal Class Ⅲ malocclusion and the patient's emotional status, as well as motivation for seeking surgical correction and satisfaction with the outcome of the surgery Methods One hundred and forty consecutive Chinese patients with skeletal Class Ⅲ malocclusion who had been treated with a combined orthodontic and surgical approach were studied Sixty seven percent (40 males and 54 females) responded to a questionnaire Fifty four percent had two jaw deformities, 32% mandibular hyperplasia and 14% maxillary hypoplasia Surgical procedures: 77% received two jaw surgeries, 15% maxillary advancement and 8% mandibular setback This was a retrospective study based on questionnaires with numerical scale ranked answers (0: not at all; 1: a little; 2: moderately; 3: quite a bit; and 4: extremely) Results ANB angle was significantly negatively correlated with feelings about the nickname related to their facial problems (embarrassment: r =-0 30, P <0 01; worn out r =-0 32, P <0 01; angry r = -0 24, P <0 05) ANB angle also had a significant negative correlation with the reasons for having the surgery (pressure from their friends: r =-0 21, P <0 05, and referred by physician: r =-0 24, P <0 05) Changes in life style as a result of surgery were significantly negatively correlated with the ANB angle before treatment, positive influence on relationships with the opposite sex ( r =-0 25, P <0 05), positive influence in social activiies ( r =-0 22, P <0 05) Conclusion The psychological status before surgery and the outcome following orthognathic surgery in patients with skeletal Class Ⅲ malocclusion were closely related to severity of the malocclusion