Impact of orthognathic surgery on the body posture

•Orthognathic surgery improves postural control in a static task of standing upright.•Head orientation in the frontal plane is improved.•Postural control is improved both in eyes closed and eyes open conditions.•Postural control is improved both in occlusal and rest position conditions. Postural con...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inGait & posture Vol. 67; pp. 25 - 30
Main Authors Paya-Argoud, M., Tardieu, C., Cheynet, F., Raskin, A., Borel, L.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Elsevier B.V 01.01.2019
Elsevier
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Summary:•Orthognathic surgery improves postural control in a static task of standing upright.•Head orientation in the frontal plane is improved.•Postural control is improved both in eyes closed and eyes open conditions.•Postural control is improved both in occlusal and rest position conditions. Postural control is classically described as being based on the visual, vestibular, and proprioceptive musculo-articular sensory systems. The influence of mandibular proprioception on postural stabilization remains controversial. Most previous studies analyzed how postural stability is influenced by partial changes in mandibular proprioception (dental occlusion and jaw position). In the present experiment, we asked whether drastic mandibular changes, resulting from orthognathic surgery (including dental, joint and muscular efferents), modify postural control. The analyzes were performed in 22 patients tested before, and 2.5 months, after orthognathic surgery for treatment of dysmorphic jaws. Experiments were performed under 4 experimental conditions: 2 visual conditions: Eyes Open (EO) and Eyes Closed (EC), and 2 occlusal conditions: Occlusion (OC: mandible positioned by the contact of the teeth), and Rest Position (RP: mandible positioned by the muscles without tooth contact). The analyses focused on head orientation in the frontal plane and on postural stabilization in a static task, consisting of standing upright. The results show that, 2.5 months after orthognathic surgery, head orientation in the frontal plane was improved, since patient’s external intercanthal lines became closer to the true horizontal line when they were tested EC and in OC condition. Postural responses, based on the wavelet transformation data, highlight an improvement in maintaining an upright stance for all the tested sensory conditions. However, such improvement was greater in the EC and RP conditions. These results show, for the first time, that after drastic mandibular changes, the weight of proprioceptive cues linked to the mandibular system may be so enhanced that it may constitute a new reference frame to orient the head in space, in darkness, and improve static postural stabilization, even in the presence of visual cues.
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ISSN:0966-6362
1879-2219
DOI:10.1016/j.gaitpost.2018.09.019