Surgical Case Orthodontics - Face Focused Orthodontics (Prototype)
Surgical Orthodontics

Surgical Case Orthodontics

When the jaw relationship is a major part of the problem, orthodontics alone may not be enough. Surgical case orthodontics combines tooth movement with oral and maxillofacial surgery so the teeth and jaws can be corrected together in a more stable, functional way.

These cases are typically coordinated in phases. Orthodontic treatment usually happens both before and after jaw surgery to prepare the arches, support precise surgical planning, and refine the bite once the jaws are in their new position.

  • Used when the bite problem is skeletal, not just dental
  • Often recommended after growth is complete
  • Includes presurgical and postsurgical orthodontics
  • May address function, facial balance, and airway concerns
When We Consider It

What Often Makes a Case Surgical

Surgical orthodontics is usually considered when the mismatch between the upper jaw, lower jaw, or facial proportions is too significant to predictably correct with orthodontic or expansion. The goal is not just straighter teeth. It is a healthier bite, better facial harmony, and a result that fits the anatomy more naturally in a lasting way.

Large Skeletal Bite Differences

Severe underbites, overbites, open bites, and crossbites can reflect jaw-position issues rather than tooth-position issues alone.

Facial Asymmetry or Imbalance

If the jaws are off center, vertically disproportionate, or retrusive, surgery may be part of creating better facial support and balance.

Functional Concerns

Difficulty chewing, unstable contacts, speech challenges, excessive incisor wear, or a bite that cannot seat well may point to a jaw-based issue.

Airway Concerns

In select adult patients, jaw advancement may be discussed when retrusive jaws and airway concerns are part of the overall diagnosis.

Why Surgery

Reasons Surgical Treatment May Be Recommended

Orthodontics can align teeth beautifully, but it cannot fully reposition the jaws. Surgery is usually discussed when the anatomy needs skeletal correction for better function, facial support, improved balance, or long-term stability.

  • 1

    To correct a jaw discrepancy instead of hiding it

    If the upper and lower jaws are mismatched, camouflage may straighten the teeth without truly fixing the underlying relationship.

  • 2

    To improve chewing efficiency and bite stability

    When contacts are unstable or function is compromised, skeletal correction may create a more solid, repeatable bite.

  • 3

    To address facial asymmetry or support the profile

    Some cases need jaw repositioning to improve balance, symmetry, or lip and chin support in a way orthodontics alone cannot.

  • 4

    To support selected airway-focused treatment plans

    In some adults, jaw advancement is part of a broader discussion around airway anatomy, sleep-disordered breathing, and overall facial structure.

Single Jaw Surgery

Upper Jaw Only or Lower Jaw Only

Not every surgical case involves both jaws. Some patients may hear upper-jaw-only or lower-jaw-only terms during planning, depending on where the skeletal correction is needed most.

Upper Jaw Only

If the upper jaw is the main issue, the surgeon may discuss upper jaw surgery or maxillary surgery.

  • Procedure termsMaxillary osteotomy, Le Fort I osteotomy
  • What it may correctOne common example is correcting an open bite, where the upper jaw position contributes to the teeth not overlapping the way they should. Illustration of upper jaw surgery used to correct an open bite
  • Surgery expectationsIn this kind of case, the upper tooth-bearing portion of the jaw is repositioned and then secured in its new position with plates and screws after the planned movement is completed.
  • Healing timelineSwelling and bruising are often most noticeable in the first several days, early healing usually happens over the first 2 to 6 weeks, and bite refinement with orthodontics continues after that.

Lower Jaw Only

If the lower jaw is the main issue, you may hear lower jaw surgery or mandibular surgery.

  • Procedure termsMandibular osteotomy, BSSO, bilateral sagittal split osteotomy
  • What it may correctLower-jaw-only surgery may be used to correct a protruding lower jaw by moving the tooth-bearing portion of the jaw back, or to correct a receding lower jaw or weak chin by repositioning the lower jaw and chin forward.
    Illustration of surgery used to correct a protruding lower jaw Illustration of surgery used to correct a receding lower jaw or weak chin
  • Surgery expectationsIn these cases, the lower jaw is divided in a controlled way so the tooth-bearing segment can be repositioned either backward or forward for better alignment and facial balance.
  • Healing timelineThe first 1 to 2 weeks are usually the most swollen, a softer diet and early healing often continue for several weeks, and final bite settling with orthodontics takes longer than the initial surgical recovery.
MMA Double Jaw Surgery

Maxillomandibular Advancement

Double jaw surgery means the upper jaw and lower jaw are both brought forward or repositioned together in a planned way. In carefully selected adult patients, that forward movement can improve skeletal support and create more room behind the tongue and soft palate.

Illustration of double jaw surgery with upper and lower jaw repositioning

Orthodontically, MMA cases still follow the same overall sequence: records and diagnosis, presurgical alignment and decompensation, surgical jaw advancement, then postsurgical bite detailing and retention.

  • Procedure termsDouble jaw surgery, bimaxillary surgery, bi-jaw surgery, and maxillomandibular advancement are names patients may hear during planning. MMA most specifically refers to advancing both jaws forward.
  • Surgery expectationsPlanning usually includes full records, close orthodontic and surgeon coordination, and a setup phase before surgery so both arches fit the new jaw relationship as accurately as possible afterward.
  • Orthodontic roleOrthodontics prepares each arch before surgery, then continues afterward to refine the bite, coordinate contacts, and help stabilize the final result.
  • Healing timelineDouble jaw surgery usually brings the most swelling in the first 1 to 2 weeks, with diet changes and early healing often continuing through the first several weeks. Orthodontic settling continues well beyond the initial surgical recovery period.
  • Important noteBecause airway treatment is individualized, MMA is usually considered only after full records, collaboration with the oral surgeon, and, when appropriate, input from sleep medicine or other medical providers.
Treatment Sequence

What Surgical Treatment Typically Entails

Most surgical cases follow a coordinated sequence rather than a single event. Records and planning come first, orthodontics prepares the teeth and arches, surgery repositions the jaws, and postsurgical orthodontics finishes the details so the bite functions well long term.

1

Records & Coordination

Photos, digital scans, x-rays, and surgeon-orthodontist planning define the goals and sequence.

2

Presurgical Orthodontics

Teeth are aligned and decompensated so the jaws can be corrected accurately at surgery.

3

Jaw Surgery

The oral surgeon repositions one jaw or both jaws based on the treatment plan and skeletal diagnosis.

4

Postsurgical Finishing

Orthodontics refines the bite, coordinates contacts, and transitions into long-term retention.

Before Surgery

Presurgical Orthodontics Prepares the Teeth for the Right Jaw Position

This phase is where braces or aligners do the detailed setup work. Teeth are leveled, aligned, coordinated within each arch, and positioned over the supporting bone so the surgeon can move the jaws into the correct relationship.

In many surgical cases, the bite can look more pronounced during this stage because the orthodontics is removing compensation rather than disguising the discrepancy. In other words, the bite relationship may temporarily appear worse before surgery so the jaws can be corrected more accurately. That is often an expected part of building toward the surgical correction.

  • Align and level the teeth within each jaw
  • Coordinate arch form and midlines
  • Decompensate tooth positions that were masking the jaw discrepancy
  • Prepare for precise digital and surgical planning
Digital orthodontic setup used for treatment planning before surgery
Key Detail

Presurgical orthodontics is not about making the bite look better right away. It is about setting up the teeth so the surgical move can be accurate and stable.

Surgery Phase

Jaw Surgery Repositions the Skeletal Foundation

Once the teeth are prepared, the oral and maxillofacial surgeon performs the planned surgical move. Depending on the case, that may involve the upper jaw, the lower jaw, or both jaws together. Some plans also include chin surgery or other supporting procedures when indicated.

Orthodontics and surgery work as one plan here. The orthodontist prepares the tooth positions and occlusion; the surgeon repositions the jaws; and both providers use the same planning goals for function, fit, and facial balance.

  • Virtual planning typically combines scans, x-rays, and facial records
  • The exact surgical movement depends on the bite, symmetry, and facial goals
  • Some cases are one-jaw surgery and others are double-jaw surgery
  • The sequence is individualized rather than one-size-fits-all
What Coordination Usually Includes
1

Shared diagnosis between the orthodontist and oral surgeon, including whether the issue is primarily dental, skeletal, or both.

2

Digital planning so tooth position, jaw position, and facial goals are coordinated before the surgical date.

3

Postsurgical communication to guide elastics, bite settling, and final orthodontic detailing after healing begins.

After Surgery

Postsurgical Orthodontics Refines and Stabilizes the Bite

After surgery, orthodontic treatment continues. This stage is usually more about finishing and settling than major tooth movement. The bite is refined, upper and lower contacts are coordinated, and any remaining detailing is completed as healing progresses.

  • Refine final tooth contacts and bite fit
  • Use elastics when needed for settling and coordination
  • Detail esthetics, incisor display, and midline fit
  • Transition into retainers for long-term maintenance
Clinical dental treatment image representing active care during orthodontic finishing
Diagnostic jaw x-ray used during surgical orthodontic consultation

Wondering if Your Case Is Orthodontic, Surgical, or Both?

A surgical consultation starts with diagnosis, not assumptions. We evaluate the teeth, jaws, facial structure, and bite together so we can determine whether orthodontics alone is enough or whether coordinated jaw-surgery planning would create a healthier and more stable result.