RESUMO
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the injury and recovery of the inferior alveolar nerve in orthognathic patients at 1 and 4 weeks after surgery using electronic thermography. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Twenty subjects with Class III dentofacial deformity were studied. All patients underwent bilateral sagittal split ramus osteotomy. To image the temperature of the face, 1 anteroposterior view and 1 lateral view were taken from both the right and left sides. Similar images were taken at 1 and 4 weeks after surgery. The control was the presurgical temperature of the 20 patients who showed unilateral or bilateral nerve damage after surgery. RESULTS: In the patients with unilateral nerve damage (n = 14), on the anteroposterior views, the temperatures of the mentum on the 2 sides differed by 0.64 degrees C at 1 week after surgery, and the difference decreased to 0.23 degrees C at 4 weeks after surgery. On the lateral images, the differences in temperature between the mentum areas were 0.10 degrees C at 1 week and 0.27 degrees C at 4 weeks after surgery. In the patients with bilateral nerve injury (n = 6), on the anteroposterior views, the temperatures of the mentum on the 2 sides differed by 0.20 degrees C at 1 week after surgery and 0.13 degrees C after 4 weeks. On the lateral views, the differences were 0.18 degrees C at 1 week and 0.34 degrees C at 4 weeks after surgery. Using the repeated measurement analysis method, the anteroposterior view showed statistically significant results in the patients with unilateral nerve damage. CONCLUSION: The infrared body temperature method is an objective method that can be applied as a supplemental diagnostic method for inferior alveolar nerve injury.