@@donpedro3374 I'm currently 16 and trying to earn money for this, so I was wondering at what age surgery is required , is it when the sutures fuse? I wanna do it ASAP so I don't have to do surgery.
@@donpedro3374 YESSS man that makes me soo happy. I was so pissed at myself for not maintaining oral posture cause my facial profile is ruined, this is great I really hope it can change it.
I prefer MSE as a sort of non-surgical alternative. Very few people need SARPE due to a failure to split the maxilla using gentler methods. These are usually older people and males.
Well if you look at Ronald Eade's RU-vid documented journey (jawhacks username) , he didn't get the surgical assist (he's 28 I believe) and he cranked the screw at home for 5 days and got a split WITHOUT surgical assist and he ended up with an asymmetrical split and caused extra complexity. Apart from the grief of cranking on your own skull and the pain/pressure he experienced up near his eye sockets and headaches, you gotta have huge balls to go through that or be some sorta masochist lol I Skyped him and he urged me to get the surgical assist You're right though, the mix-Palatal suture interdigates more in men I reckon if you're young and female you could probably attempt it without the cuts. My sarpe is this Monday, excited but nervous. Paul's excellent video here helps to soothe my anxiety Here's to less UARS cheers
@@_Trakman If you watch Ronny's interviews with Dr. Vaughan and Dr. Ting, they talk about how you can use a different protocol to get a split with less pain and less turning. And you can have a plan A, B, and C to use the method with the least amount of force to split the midpalatal suture. Vaughan's surgical assist is different than SARPE and seems better because there are fewer cuts.
Danielle Holland I was thinking of getting a sarpe surgery as opposed to a double surgery as the latter is notoriously long when recovering from it and possibly involves permanent nerve damage .What other methods are you referring to that are less invasive and can still expand my intermolar width and in turn increase my nasal volume ?
@@kommo1 I had the SARME surgery done 6 days ago.The first 2 days were terrible, because I could feel my body responding to the surgery. The swelling is at it's worst after 24-48 hours. Now it's not much more than a bit inconvenient.
yes. kind of. varies from person to person. But if you have a good oral surgeon they usually have a few tricks up their sleeve to prevent it from happening
Yes you can I'm 33 yrs old and have a palate expander with top and bottom braces on right now and it's showing a huge difference my arch has widen. What happens is the bone stretches even though it's fused it's stretches takes a little longer than if you were to get surgery to actually separate it and to oppose to when you a kid the bones haven't fused together but it's possible to get a palate expander with braces...if your orthodontist tells you no about the palate expander then go somewhere else until you find one that will do it....but overall for me it's working perfectly my smile is coming out more more broader
shiningstar ive just got this surgery in Montreal, Canada and it cost me 7000$ CAN for everything, expansion device, braces on both upper and jaw teeths if that makes sens lol
Manish Agarwal your daughter doesn’t need surgery because she’s still young and those bones haven’t fused together. So all she has to do is wear a special expander. But for adults to do this, they do need to have surgery. This video is about that particular surgery. Hope your daughter is doing well!