Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome : Fifty-one consecutive patients treated by maxillofacial surgery

2000 
The place of surgical treatment in obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) remains unclear. Uvulopalatopharyngoplasty (UPPP) has a response rate of 41% overall and only 5% when retrolingual narrowing is present. Thus, in cases with suspected hypopharyngeal collapse maxillofacial surgery has been proposed with improved results. The Stanford group has designed a step-by-step surgical procedure tailored to the specific anatomical abnormalities encountered in each patient. The goal is to avoid a full maxillomandibular advancement osteotomy (MMO), at least in a subgroup of patients, beginning with a limited mandibular osteotomy (with or without hyoid myotomy and hyothyroidopexy and with or without UPPP) (phase 1 surgery). In this procedure MMO is performed as the second or third step (phase 2 surgery). The present study reports on our prospective experience with 51 consecutive patients (64 surgical procedures) treated by the step-by-step maxillofacial surgery previously described by the Stanford team. Only 2 o...
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