Patients' sample
Twenty-eight patients who had undergone bimaxillary surgery for a class II relationship (mean age, 24.5 ± 4.9 years; 18 females and 10 males), and 33 patients who had undergone bimaxillary surgery for a class III relationship (mean age, 23.4 ± 3.7 years; 20 females and 13 males) were selected from adult treatment records. Bimaxillary surgery consisted of LeFort I osteotomy with maxillary advancement and/or impaction and bilateral sagittal split ramus osteotomy carried out for mandibular setback or advancement. Setback of the maxilla was not done. No additional surgical procedures were performed on the midface or chin, such as infraorbital augmentation, distraction, rhinoplasty, or genioplasty. Exclusion criteria to avoid any bias were patients' findings that exceeded routine orthognathic planning. These were patients with an anterior open bite of more than 1 cm, facial asymmetry with occlusal cants in the frontal plane, midline deviations and mandibular border asymmetry, matured cleft lip and palate, severe congenital facial deformity, and posttraumatic deformity.
All subjects had available both a lateral cephalogram and a lateral photogram in the natural head position (NHP) taken before orthodontic appliances were applied and 9 months postsurgery, after removal of the orthodontic appliances and osteosynthesis materials (median follow-up, 9.4 ± 0.6 months).
Lateral cephalometry
Subjects were positioned in the cephalostat (Orthoceph; Siemens AG, Munich, Germany), and then the head holder was adjusted until the ear rods could be positioned into the ears without moving the patient. All radiographs were taken in the NHP with teeth together and lips in repose and with a metric ruler in front of the midfacial vertical line. No occipital supplement was used. According to cephalometric standards, the film distance to the X-ray tube was fixed at 150 cm, and the film distance to the midsagittal plane of the patient's head, at 18 cm.
Tracings were done for all cephalograms. After loading the cephalogram into a PC, the ruler was used to size the cephalogram image in the software program (Adobe Photoshop version 7.0; Adobe Systems, San Jose, CA, USA), so that 1 mm on the rule represented 1 mm of actual scale (life-size) in the software program. The landmarks were identified manually by a single examiner using the photographic software. Soft and hard tissue landmarks of the cephalograms were traced using a modified version of the analysis of Legan and Burstone [16] and Lew et al. [17] (Figs. 1 and 2). Therefore, the horizontal reference line was constructed by raising a line 7 ° from sella-nasion, and a line perpendicular to this at nasion was used as the vertical reference line. Movement of hard and soft tissue landmarks from pre- to postsurgery was measured in millimeters to the horizontal and vertical reference lines. The corresponding angles were constructed and measured in degrees in the pre- and postsurgical cephalograms. Differences were recorded as the surgical change.
2-D photogrammetry
Subjects were asked to sit on a chair in front of a pale blue background, maintain a straight back, and look straight ahead with a relaxed facial expression and eyes fully open, lips gently closed, and not smiling. A neck holder was then adjusted to help the subjects fix their NHP. For reproducibility, a simple, indirect light source on the ceiling was used, consisting of four 60-W fluorescent tubes to eliminate undesirable shadows from the contours of the facial profile. The subjects' faces were photographed in right lateral view, together with a metric scaled ruler in front of the midfacial vertical line (true vertical (TV)). A high-resolution digital camera with a flash (Canon 450D; Tokyo, Japan) was firmly mounted on a photo stand 1 m in front of the subject. All photographs were taken at 2,048 × 1,536 pixels resolution and saved in JPEG file format. Images were stored on the PC's hard drive and then transferred into the photographic software program. The lateral photographs were adjusted to life-size according to the cephalogram adjustment as above. Soft tissue landmarks, distances, and angles were traced with the tools of the software. Additionally, TV on nasion and true horizontal (TH) (perpendicular to TV through the tragus) were constructed as reference lines for horizontal and vertical landmark movements. Pre- and postsurgical distances of each landmark toward reference lines were measured and differences were recorded as the vertical and horizontal surgical change, respectively, (Figs. 2 and 3).
Statistics and reliability of measurements
The collected data were subjected to statistical analysis using the PASW statistical software package, version 18.0 (SPSS, Chicago, IL, USA). Differences between groups were evaluated using the paired t test. Results were considered significant if p < 0.05 and highly significant if p < 0.01. Pearson's correlation analysis was used to assess the degree of correlation between soft and hard tissue changes. The adjusted coefficient of determination (adj R
2) was used to assess the predictability of landmark movements (ranging from 0 = no prediction possible to 1 = accurate prediction possible).
Reliability of measurements was determined by randomly selecting ten cephalograms and ten lateral photograms to repeat the tracings by a second senior examiner. The method error was calculated using the formula: \( \sqrt {{\sum {{({X_1} - {X_2})}^2}}} /2n \) in which X
1 was the first measurement; X
2, the second measurement; and n, the number of repeated records. All respective values of method error calculation for the linear measurements ranged between 0.32 and 0.48 mm for cephalometry and between 0.35 and 0.51 mm for 2-D photogrammetry and for angular measurements, between 1.4 and 5.2 ° and between 1.6 and 4.9 °, respectively. Significant differences between the reliability of photogrammetry and cephalometry could not be obtained.