9 research outputs found
Three-dimensional aesthetic assessment of class II patients before and after orthognathic surgery and its association with quantitative surgical changes
The aim of this study was to compare evaluations of the aesthetic outcome of
class II orthognathic patients, as performed by observers with varying expertise using
three-dimensional (3D) facial images, and to examine the relationship of aesthetic
ratings in relation to quantitative surgical changes. Pre- and postoperative 3D facial
images of 20 surgically treated class II patients (13 female, 7 male) were assessed for
aesthetics by orthodontists, maxillofacial surgeons, and laypeople. Attractiveness
ratingsfor the lips,chin,and overall facial aestheticswere evaluatedona 5-pointLikert
scale. Correlation between the aesthetic scores was obtained and quantitative surgical
changes were examined. For all groups of observers, significant improvements in
attractiveness scores were found, especially for the chin assessment. Orthodontists
perceived the greatest improvement and laypeople the smallest. Overall, laypeople
scored higher with less variability, but with lower intra- and inter-observer agreement.
No significant correlation was found between the aesthetic improvement and soft
tissue surgical changes. To avoid patient dissatisfaction, it is important to bear in mind
that the demands and perception of aesthetic improvement after orthognathic surgery
are higher for clinicians than for the general public.status: publishe