Orthognathic Surgery Corrective Jaw Surgery Dallas Fort Worth — DFWOMS
Facial Reconstruction

Orthognathic
Surgery
in Dallas–Fort Worth

When jaws don’t meet correctly, orthodontics alone can’t fix it. Orthognathic (corrective jaw) surgery at DFWOMS repositions the upper jaw, lower jaw, or both — correcting your bite, improving function, and transforming your facial profile at our Irving, Mesquite, and Ennis locations.

Board-Certified Surgeons 3D Virtual Surgical Planning Orthodontist Coordination Medicaid Accepted Irving · Mesquite · Ennis
What is orthognathic surgery?

Correcting the jaw problems orthodontics alone cannot fix

Orthognathic surgery — also called corrective jaw surgery — is a procedure performed by an oral and maxillofacial surgeon to reposition the upper jaw (maxilla), the lower jaw (mandible), or both, in order to correct skeletal discrepancies that affect how your teeth come together and how your face looks and functions.

When a bite problem arises from the position of the jaw bones themselves rather than just the teeth, braces and aligners can align the teeth within each jaw, but they cannot move the jaw bones into a new position. Orthognathic surgery does exactly that — working alongside orthodontic treatment to deliver results that neither discipline can achieve alone. The outcome is a bite that functions correctly, a profile that is more balanced, and in many cases resolution of long-standing functional problems like difficulty chewing, breathing issues, and TMJ pain.


Who needs orthognathic surgery?

Conditions corrective jaw surgery can address

Jaw growth is a gradual process through childhood and adolescence. In some patients, the upper and lower jaws grow at different rates or in different directions — creating a discrepancy that cannot be corrected without repositioning the bone itself. These conditions may exist from birth, develop due to hereditary patterns, or result from trauma or disease.

Difficulty chewing, biting, or swallowing — severe skeletal malocclusion can make it impossible to chew effectively or bite through certain foods
Open bite — when the upper and lower front teeth don’t meet even when the back teeth are together, leaving a gap that affects speech and function
Underbite — the lower jaw protrudes in front of the upper jaw (mandibular prognathism), causing the lower teeth to sit in front of the upper
Severe overbite — excessive skeletal overbite where the upper jaw protrudes significantly beyond the lower, often causing chin receding and profile imbalance
Facial asymmetry — one side of the jaw is longer, wider, or positioned differently from the other, causing visible facial imbalance and bite discrepancy
Obstructive sleep apnea — jaw position directly affects airway size; advancing the lower jaw surgically can dramatically improve or resolve sleep apnea in select patients
Chronic jaw or TMJ pain — skeletal malocclusion can overload the TMJ and chewing muscles, causing chronic pain that resolves when the jaw is properly positioned
Speech problems — jaw position directly affects the ability to form certain sounds; correcting skeletal jaw discrepancies can resolve speech difficulties

Types of corrective jaw surgery

Surgical procedures performed at DFWOMS

The specific procedure — or combination of procedures — is determined by the nature and severity of your jaw discrepancy. Our surgeons perform all of the following.

Upper Jaw Surgery (Le Fort I Osteotomy)

The upper jaw (maxilla) is surgically separated from the facial skeleton and repositioned in three dimensions — it can be moved forward, backward, upward, downward, or rotated to correct its relationship with the lower jaw and the facial profile. This procedure corrects open bites, crossbites, and midface deficiencies, and can also improve lip support and the overall balance of the face. Titanium plates and screws hold the repositioned jaw securely in its new position.

Lower Jaw Surgery (Bilateral Sagittal Split Osteotomy — BSSO)

The most common orthognathic procedure. The lower jaw (mandible) is carefully cut on both sides and repositioned forward or backward as needed. This corrects underbites, overbites, and many cases of facial asymmetry. The repositioned jaw is secured with titanium plates and screws. Because both sides of the jaw are moved simultaneously, a single procedure corrects the entire lower jaw and its relationship to the upper.

Double Jaw Surgery (Bimaxillary Osteotomy)

When both the upper and lower jaws require repositioning, both procedures are performed during the same surgery. This approach is used for complex skeletal discrepancies involving both jaws — including significant open bites, severe underbites, or facial asymmetries affecting both arches. Combining both corrections in a single surgery means one anesthesia event, one recovery period, and a more comprehensive result. It is the most powerful tool available for transforming both the function and aesthetics of the face.

Genioplasty (Chin Repositioning)

Often performed in combination with upper or lower jaw surgery, genioplasty repositions the chin bone to further refine facial balance. The chin can be advanced, set back, raised, lowered, or shifted laterally — completing the overall facial harmony that jaw surgery alone may not fully achieve. It addresses chin asymmetry, receding chin, or excessive chin projection as part of the comprehensive orthognathic treatment plan.


Technology at DFWOMS

3D imaging & virtual surgical planning

At DFWOMS, every orthognathic surgery case is planned in three dimensions before the first incision is made. We use state-of-the-art 3D Cone Beam CT imaging combined with virtual surgical planning software to build a precise digital model of your facial skeleton, simulate the planned jaw movements, and design custom surgical guides — all before your surgery date.

What virtual surgical planning means for you

Virtual surgical planning allows our surgeons to measure every movement with sub-millimeter precision, evaluate the predicted outcome in three dimensions, identify and resolve potential challenges before the operating room, and communicate the expected result to you clearly using 3D models. Custom surgical splints produced from the virtual plan guide jaw positioning during surgery, significantly improving accuracy and reducing operating time. This technology transforms complex jaw surgery into a predictable, precise procedure.


The process

What to expect, step by step

1
Consultation & evaluation

Your journey begins with a comprehensive consultation with our surgeons, often coordinated with your orthodontist. We perform a complete clinical examination, review X-rays and photographs, and discuss your functional concerns and aesthetic goals. Based on this evaluation, we determine whether orthognathic surgery is indicated and which procedures would best address your specific skeletal discrepancy.

2
Pre-surgical orthodontics

Before surgery, your orthodontist places braces or aligners to align the teeth within each jaw individually. This pre-surgical orthodontic phase — which typically takes 6–18 months — is essential: it ensures that after the jaw bones are repositioned, the teeth will fit together correctly in their new positions. Without this preparation, the bite after surgery would not be stable or functional.

3
3D imaging & virtual surgical planning

As surgery approaches, a 3D CT scan is taken and uploaded into our virtual planning software. Our surgeons simulate every planned jaw movement on the digital model, verify the predicted outcome, and produce custom surgical splints that will guide jaw positioning in the operating room. This step is what transforms a complex procedure into a precise, reproducible surgical plan.

4
Surgery

Surgery is performed under general anesthesia at Baylor University Medical Center, where our surgeons hold full privileges. Incisions are made entirely inside the mouth, leaving no visible external scars. The planned jaw osteotomies are performed, the bones are repositioned precisely according to the virtual plan, and titanium plates and screws secure the new position. Operating time varies from 2–5 hours depending on the procedures performed.

5
Recovery

Swelling peaks in the first 3–5 days and resolves gradually over 6–8 weeks. A liquid and soft food diet is maintained for 4–6 weeks. Most patients return to work or school within 2–3 weeks. Opioid-free pain management keeps recovery comfortable. Final results — including full resolution of swelling — are visible at 3–6 months post-operatively.

6
Post-surgical orthodontics

After healing, your orthodontist resumes treatment to fine-tune the final bite alignment — making the small adjustments that complete the tooth-to-tooth relationship in the new jaw position. This final orthodontic phase typically takes 6–12 months. Together with the surgery, it delivers a result that is both functionally stable and aesthetically refined.


See it in action

Orthognathic surgery at DFWOMS

Watch how our surgeons use 3D planning and precise surgical technique to transform jaw function and facial harmony.


Why choose DFWOMS

Expert corrective jaw surgery in Dallas–Fort Worth

Board-certified oral & maxillofacial surgeons with extensive experience performing the full spectrum of orthognathic procedures
State-of-the-art 3D imaging and virtual surgical planning — every case planned in three dimensions before surgery begins
Hospital surgical privileges at Baylor University Medical Center for safe, expert surgical care throughout the procedure and overnight monitoring when needed
Seamless coordination with your orthodontist throughout every phase — pre-surgical, surgical, and post-surgical — for integrated, end-to-end care
Medicaid accepted · Bilingual staff (English and Spanish) · Three convenient DFW locations
Transparent, patient-centered process — we involve you fully in every step, from understanding the diagnosis to reviewing your 3D surgical simulation before committing to treatment

Frequently asked questions

Common questions about orthognathic surgery

The key question is whether your bite problem arises from the position of the teeth within the jaw, or from the position of the jaw bones themselves. Orthodontics can correct tooth position; surgery is required when the jaw bones need to be moved. If your orthodontist or dentist has told you that braces alone cannot fully correct your bite, or if you have a significant underbite, overbite, open bite, or facial asymmetry, a consultation with our surgeons will clarify whether orthognathic surgery is indicated for your case.

The full treatment process — from starting pre-surgical orthodontics to completing post-surgical orthodontics — typically takes 2–3 years. Pre-surgical orthodontics usually takes 6–18 months, followed by surgery and recovery (most patients return to normal activity within 2–3 weeks), followed by post-surgical orthodontics of 6–12 months. While this is a significant commitment, the functional and aesthetic improvements are permanent and life-changing for most patients.

No. All incisions for orthognathic surgery are made entirely inside the mouth — there are no cuts on the face or external skin. The jawbones are accessed through the oral mucosa. This means there are no visible external scars whatsoever. Genioplasty (chin surgery), when included, is also performed through an intraoral incision.

Surgery is performed under general anesthesia, so there is no pain during the procedure. Post-operatively, significant swelling is expected and most patients experience moderate discomfort that is well managed with our opioid-free pain management protocol. Many patients describe the recovery as less painful than expected. The swelling — not pain — is often the most challenging aspect of recovery, particularly in the first week. Most patients are comfortable enough to return to school or desk work within 2–3 weeks.

In most modern orthognathic surgery, the jaw is not wired shut. Titanium plates and screws provide rigid internal fixation that holds the repositioned bones securely — allowing controlled jaw movement from early in recovery. Light elastics may be placed on the braces to guide the bite, but these allow some movement and are far less restrictive than traditional jaw wiring. A liquid and soft diet is maintained for several weeks while the bone heals.

Orthognathic surgery is frequently covered by medical insurance when it is performed to correct documented functional problems — such as difficulty chewing, significant bite misalignment, obstructive sleep apnea, or TMJ dysfunction. Coverage is determined by your insurance plan and the clinical documentation supporting medical necessity. We accept most major medical and dental insurance providers and Medicaid at all three DFW locations. Our team will work with you to navigate insurance authorization — contact us before your consultation.

Jaw not meeting correctly?
Schedule your orthognathic surgery consultation

Our surgeons will evaluate your jaw, explain your options, and show you the expected results in 3D. Medicaid accepted at all three DFW locations.

972-594-7414 Request appointment →
Insurance & financing

We accept most major medical and dental insurance plans, Medicaid, CareCredit, and LendingClub financing.

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Take the next step

A bite that works — a face that reflects you.

Our oral surgeons in Irving, Mesquite, and Ennis use cutting-edge 3D surgical planning and decades of surgical experience to deliver corrective jaw surgery results that are precise, predictable, and lasting. Schedule your consultation today.

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