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Facial
fracture surgery
Oral and maxillofacial surgery is surgery to correct a wide
spectrum of diseases, injuries and defects in the head, neck, face, jaws
and the hard and soft tissues of the oral and maxillofacial region. It
is a recognized international surgical specialty.
Regulations
- In the U.S.A., Canada, Australia, and New Zealand, oral and
maxillofacial surgery is one of the 9 specialties recognized by the
American Dental Association, Royal College of Dentists of Canada, and
Royal Australasian College of Dental Surgeons, training programs lead
to the trainee obtaining qualifications in both Medicine and
Dentistry.
In other parts of the world oral and maxillofacial surgery as a
specialty exists but under different forms as the work is sometimes
performed by a single or dual qualified specialist depending on each
country's regulations and training opportunities available.
Oral and maxillofacial
surgeons
An oral and maxillofacial surgeon is a regional specialist
surgeon treating the entire craniomaxillofacial complex: anatomical area
of the mouth, jaws, face, skull, as well as associated structures.
Maxillofacial surgeons are usually initially qualified in dentistry
and have undergone further surgical training. Some OMS residencies
integrate a medical education as well & an appropriate degree in
medicine (MBBS or MD or equivalent) is earned, although in the United
States there is legally no difference in what a dual degree OMFS can do
compared to someone who earned a four year certificate. Oral &
maxillofacial surgery is universally recognized as a one of the nine
specialties of dentistry. However also in the UK and many other
countries OMFS is a medical specialty as well culminating in the FRCS
(Fellowship of the Royal College of Surgeons). Regardless, all oral &
maxillofacial surgeons must obtain a degree in dentistry (BDS, BDent,
DDS, or DMD or equivalent) before being allowed to begin residency
training in oral and maxillofacial surgery.
They also may choose to undergo further training in a 1 or 2 year
subspecialty fellowship training in the following areas:
- Head and neck cancer - microvascular reconstruction
- Cosmetic facial surgery
- Craniofacial surgery/Pediatric Maxillofacial surgery
- Cranio-maxillofacial trauma
The popularity of oral and maxillofacial surgery as a career for
persons whose first degree was medicine, not dentistry, seems to be
increasing. Integrated programs are becoming more available to medical
graduates allowing them to complete the dental degree requirement in
about 3 years in order for them to advance to subsequently complete Oral
and Maxillofacial surgical training.
Surgical procedures
Treatments may be performed on the craniomaxillofacial complex:
mouth, jaws, neck, face, skull, and include:
- Dentoalveolar surgery (surgery to remove impacted teeth, difficult
tooth extractions, extractions on medically compromised patients, bone
grafting or preprosthetic surgery to provide better anatomy for the
placement of implants, dentures, or other dental prostheses)
- Diagnosis and treatment of benign pathology (cysts, tumors etc.)
- Diagnosis and treatment (ablative and reconstructive surgery,
microsurgery) of malignant pathology (oral & head and neck cancer).
- Diagnosis and treatment of cutaneous malignancy (skin cancer), lip
reconstruction
- Diagnosis and treatment of congenital craniofacial malformations
such as cleft lip and palate and cranial vault malformations such as
craniosynostosis, (craniofacial surgery)
- Diagnosis and treatment of chronic facial pain disorders
- Diagnosis and treatment of temporomandibular joint (TMJ) disorders
- Diagnosis and treatment of dysgnathia (incorrect bite), and
orthognathic (literally "straight bite") reconstructive surgery,
orthognathic surgery, maxillomandibular advancement, surgical
correction of facial asymmetry.
- Diagnosis and treatment of soft and hard tissue trauma of the oral
and maxillofacial region (jaw fractures, cheek bone fractures, nasal
fractures, LeFort fracture, skull fractures and eye socket fractures.
- Splint and surgical treatment of sleep apnea, maxillomandibular
advancement, genioplasty (in conjunction with sleep labs or
physicians)
- Surgery to insert osseointegrated (bone fused) dental implants and
Maxillofacial implants for attaching craniofacial prostheses and bone
anchored hearing aids.
- Cosmetic surgery limited to the head and neck:
(rhytidectomy/facelift, browlift, blepharoplasty/Asian blepharoplasty,
otoplasty, rhinoplasty, septoplasty, cheek augmentation, chin
augmentation, genioplasty, oculoplastics, neck liposuction, lip
enhancement, injectable cosmetic treatments, botox, chemical peel
etc.)
Australia, Canada, New
Zealand and the United States
Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery is one of the 9 dental specialties
recognized by the American Dental Association, Royal College of Dentists
of Canada, and the Royal Australasian College of Dental Surgeons. Oral
and Maxillofacial Surgery requires 4-6 years of further formal
University training after dental school (DDS, BDent, DMD or BDS).
Four-year residency programs grant a certificate of specialty training
in Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery. Six-year residency programs grant the
specialty certificate in addition to a medical degree (MD, MBBS, MBChB
etc.). Specialists in this field are designated registrable U.S. “Board
Eligible” and warrant exclusive titles. Approximately 50% of the
training programs in the U.S., 100% of the programs in Australia and New
Zealand, and 20% of Canadian training programs, are dual-degree leading
to dual certification in Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery and Medicine
(MD, MBBS, MBChB etc).
The typical training program for an Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeon
is:
- 4 Years Undergraduate Study (BA, BSc, or equivalent)
- 4 Years Dental Study (DMD, BDent, DDS or BDS)
- 4 - 6 Years Residency Training (additional time for acquiring
medical degree)
- After completion of surgical training most undertake final
specialty examinations: (U.S. "Board Certified (ABOMS)"),
(Australia/NZ: "FRACDS(OMS)"), or (Canada: "FRCD(C)(OMS)").
- Many dually qualified oral and maxillofacial surgeons are now also
obtaining Fellowships with the American College of Surgeons (FACS)
- Average total length after Secondary School: 12 - 14 Years
In addition, graduates of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery training
programs can pursue fellowships, typically 1 - 2 years in length, in the
following areas:
- Head and neck cancer - microvascular reconstruction
- Cosmetic facial surgery (facelift, rhinoplasty, etc.)
- Craniofacial surgery/Pediatric Maxillofacial surgery (cleft lip
and palate repair, surgery for craniosynostosis, etc.)
- Cranio-maxillofacial trauma (soft tissue and skeletal injuries to
the face, head and neck)
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