Background: During the past few decades, orthognathic surgery has become routine in oral and maxillofacial surgery. As these surgical interventions are elective, the goal is a low complication rate. The aim of this study was to analyze the intraoperative and postoperative complications after orthognathic surgery without considering orthodontic relapse.
Patients and methods: The medical files of 507 patients were reviewed who had been treated in the department of oral maxillofacial surgery at the Martin-Luther-Universität in Halle-Wittenberg during a period of 51 years. The indication for orthognathic surgery was mandibular hyperplasia in 314 cases (61.9%), mandibular hypoplasia in 69 cases (13.6%), mandibular hyperplasia with a frontal open bite in 53 cases (10.5%), maxillary hyperplasia with a cleft in 30 cases (5.9%), maxillary hyperplasia in 22 cases (4.3%), severe laterognathia in 10 cases (2.1%), and isolated frontal open bite in 9 cases (1.5%). The surgical procedures were as follows: bilateral sagittal split osteotomy (n = 336, 66%), Le Fort I osteotomy (n = 29, 5.9%), bimaxillary osteotomy (n = 35, 6.3%), and segment osteotomy (n = 107, 21.1%). Rigid fixation was used in 147 patients.
Results: In 55% of the patients a postoperative neurosensory deficit of the inferior alveolar nerve was observed, which was only found in 28% after 1 year. Inflammatory wound healing was found in 5.3% of the patients.
Conclusion: Due to antibiotic perioperative prophylaxis and modern rigid osteosynthesis devices, orthognathic surgery has become a routine method in maxillofacial surgery with predictable surgical results.