School of Dentistry, Oregon Health and Science University, 97201, Oregon, Portland, 2730 S Moody Ave., USA.
Department of Oral and Craniofacial Sciences, School of Dentistry, Oregon Health and Science University, 97201, Oregon, Portland, 2730 S Moody Ave., USA.
Orthod Craniofac Res. 2023 Dec;26 Suppl 1:142-150. doi: 10.1111/ocr.12659. Epub 2023 Apr 7.
This study tested orthognathic surgery effects on temporomandibular joint (TMJ) compressive stresses.
Pre- (T1) and post-surgery (T2) cone-beam computed tomography images were collected from consenting subjects aged ≥15 years. Anatomical data were used to measure surgical changes in anteroposterior mandibular position and occlusal plane angle (FH-OP), estimate condylar loading areas (mm ) and calculate T1 and T2 TMJ and jaw muscle forces (N) during canine biting via numerical modelling. Analysis of covariance tested for sex and biting angle differences in T2 - T1 TMJ compressive stresses (TMJ force/loading area, MPa). Principal component analyses identified jaw muscle forces that accounted for changes in T2 - T1 TMJ loads. Regression analyses tested the correlations between surgical changes in mandibular position, FH-OP, TMJ loads and muscle forces.
Of 148 cases screened, 28 females and 16 males provided complete records. Condylar loading areas were significantly smaller (P = .024) for females vs males (124 ± 5 vs 144 ± 7 mm ). T2 - T1 differences in TMJ compressive stresses varied by surgical change, biting angle and sex. Overall, the largest increases in TMJ compressive stresses post-surgery were for females with mandibular setbacks where FH-OP angle decreased. T2 - T1 changes in jaw muscle forces had moderate (ipsilateral, λ = 4.59; η = 0.071) to large (contralateral, λ = 1.49; η = 0.31) effects on TMJ loads.
T2 - T1 differences in TMJ compressive stresses during canine biting were affected by surgical changes in mandibular position and occlusal plane angle, biting angle and sex. Surgical changes altered jaw muscle forces for the same biting conditions and, thus, affected TMJ loads and compressive stresses.
本研究旨在测试正颌手术对颞下颌关节(TMJ)压缩应力的影响。
从同意参与研究的年龄≥15 岁的患者中收集术前(T1)和术后(T2)的锥形束 CT 图像。使用解剖学数据测量下颌前后位置和咬合平面角度(FH-OP)的手术变化,估计髁突的加载区域(mm),并通过数值模拟计算犬齿咬合力时 T1 和 T2TMJ 和咀嚼肌的力(N)。协方差分析测试了性别和咬合角度对 T2-T1TMJ 压缩应力(TMJ 力/加载面积,MPa)的差异。主成分分析确定了占 T2-T1TMJ 负荷变化的咀嚼肌力。回归分析测试了下颌位置、FH-OP、TMJ 负荷和肌肉力的手术变化之间的相关性。
在筛选的 148 例中,28 名女性和 16 名男性提供了完整的记录。女性的髁突加载面积明显小于男性(124±5 与 144±7mm)(P=0.024)。TMJ 压缩应力的 T2-T1 差异因手术变化、咬合角度和性别而异。总体而言,对于下颌后退且 FH-OP 角度减小的女性,TMJ 压缩应力术后增加最大。TMJ 负荷的变化与咀嚼肌力的变化呈中等(同侧,λ=4.59;η=0.071)至较大(对侧,λ=1.49;η=0.31)的关系。
犬齿咬合力时 TMJ 压缩应力的 T2-T1 差异受下颌位置和咬合平面角度、咬合角度和性别的手术变化影响。手术变化改变了相同咬合条件下的咀嚼肌力,从而影响了 TMJ 负荷和压缩应力。