The aim of this article is to analyze the incidence of undiagnosed obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) in patients affected by dento-skeletal malformation. We also evaluated the patterns most affected by the condition and calculated the post surgical changes. We conducted a retrospective cohort study on 71 patients including 35 men and 36 women. The patients studied were affected by dento-skeletal class II and III malformations and underwent bimaxillary orthognathic surgery in all cases. Patients were evaluated with polysomnography before surgery and at least 6 months after surgery to assess any improvement or worsening of the apnea hypopnea index (AHI) index. Regarding AHI evaluation criteria, an AHI > 5 was considered indicative of OSA, 4 < AHI < 5 was considered borderline and AHI < 4 was considered indicative of non-OSA. We also considered demographic variables like age at the time of intervention and gender, and anatomical variables like the pattern of the dento-skeletal deformity and the presence or absence of maxillary hypoplasia. Qualitative variables were described as absolute and relative frequencies, while quantitative variables were summarized as mean and standard deviation. To quantitatively express the relationship between two variables, the correlation coefficient was calculated. The covariance array was used to evaluate multiple correlations. Our study shows that there is a significant percentage (33%) of patients who undergo orthognathic surgery with an AHI > 5 and also a percentage of patients (11%) who can be considered to be "borderline." It emerges that the pattern most at risk is the one characterized by retruded maxilla and patients with dento-skeletal class II. Considering the post surgical period, the statistical analysis shows that after surgery, only 8% of malformed patients present an AHI > 5, compared to the 20.5% described in the Italian population. In patients who receive orthognathic surgery, the presence of obstructive sleep apnea is significantly higher than in the general population. When planning the surgical correction of a dento-skeletal malformation, the surgeon must aim not only for the esthetics results, but also for proper stomatognathic and respiratory function; this cannot be achieved without taking polysomnography information into account.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11275503PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/dj12070225DOI Listing

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