| Literature DB >> 32770002 |
Giovanni Badiali1,2, Mirko Bevini3, Federica Ruggiero4, Laura Cercenelli5, Elisa Lovero5, Elisabetta De Simone5, Paola Rucci5, Alberto Bianchi6, Claudio Marchetti4,5.
Abstract
In orthognathic surgery, the use of patient-specific osteosynthesis devices is a novel approach used to transfer the virtual surgical plan to the patient. The aim of this study is to analyse the quality of mandibular anatomy reproduction using a mandible-first mandibular-PSI guided procedure on 22 patients. Three different positioning guide designs were compared in terms of osteosynthesis plate positioning and mandibular anatomical outcome. PSIs and positioning guides were designed according to virtual surgical plan and 3D printed using biocompatible materials. A CBCT scan was performed 1 month after surgery and postoperative mandibular models were segmented for comparison against the surgical plan. A precision comparison was carried out among the three groups. Correlations between obtained rami and plates discrepancies and between planned rami displacements and obtained rami discrepancies were calculated. Intraoperatively, all PSIs were successfully applied. The procedure was found to be accurate in planned mandibular anatomy reproduction. Different guide designs did not differ in mandibular outcome precision. Plate positional discrepancies influenced the corresponding ramus position, mainly in roll angle and vertical translation. Ramus planned displacement was found to be a further potential source of inaccuracy, possibly due to osteosynthesis surface interference.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32770002 PMCID: PMC7415134 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-70107-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(A) Virtual osteotomies in IPS CaseDesigner. (B) Virtual surgery planning in IPS CaseDesigner. (C) Ramus position planning in IPS CaseDesigner. Single images joined in Adobe Photoshop 19 software (Adobe Inc. San Jose, CA, U.S.).
Figure 2(A) Design A guide CAD rendering. (B) Design B and C guides CAD rendering. Both guide designs were produced and used on the last 10 patients. (C) Plates CAD rendering. Teeth roots and inferior alveolar nerves were segmented and carefully avoided while planning the plates’ position. (D) Plate shown on a stereolithographic model of the planned mandibular anatomy. DMLS manufacturing allows for odd shaped plates. In this case the shape was designed to avoid interferences with the mental nerve. Single images joined in Adobe Photoshop.
Figure 3Intraoperative view of design A guide (A), design B guide (B), design C guide (C) and plate (D). Single images joined in Adobe Photoshop.
Figure 4Analysis method in CloudCompare v2.9.1 software. Planned models (orange) were aligned to postoperative models (blue) on the basis of the teeth-bearing fragment (A). Colorimetric surface maps were used to check the alignment (B). Planned rami were aligned to postoperative rami position and the transformation was recorded; the alignment was visually checked via generation of colorimetric surface maps; axes and planes are also shown (X = red, Y = green, Z = blue) (C). An analogous protocol was applied to PSIs (D). Single images joined in Adobe Photoshop.
Frequency of postoperative adverse events.
Median, interquartile range, mean and standard deviation of each variable considered.
Figure 5Box plots displaying the eight considered variables for both rami and plates (n = 44).
Figure 6Simulation of the obtained median rami discrepancies on an example surgical plan in CloudCompare v2.9.1 software. A colorimetric surface map was used to show surface differences of the simulated median position from planning. Negative yaw can be seen as the prominent component of the median discrepancy.
Spearman’s correlation coefficients of study variables (n = 44). Significant correlations are highlighted in turquoise.
In (a), Section A shows the correlations between the signed discrepancies of the planned and obtained positions of the rami and the signed discrepancies of the planned and obtained positions of the plates; Section B shows the correlations between the signed discrepancies of the planned and obtained positions of the rami and the signed discrepancies of the planned and preoperative positions of the rami.
In (b), Section A shows the correlations between rami and plates total discrepancies between obtained and planned position; Section B shows the correlations between rami total obtained-from-planned discrepancies and original-to-planned discrepancies.
p-values of the Kruskal–Wallis test (n = 44) with pairwise post-hoc Mann–Whitney tests comparing plates and rami total angular and translational discrepancy among guide designs.
Medians and IQRs for each variable obtained with different guide designs are also shown.