The long face syndrome and impairment of the nasopharyngeal airway
Experimental evidence suggests that altered muscular function can influence craniofacial morphology. The switch from a nasal to an oronasal breathing pattern induces functional adaptations that include an increase in total anterior face height and vertical development of the lower anterior face. While some animal studies have suggested predictable growth patterns may occur, studies in human subjects have been much more controversial. Therefore, individual variations in response should be expected from the alteration of a long face syndrome patient's breathing mode.Abstract
Contributor Notes
L.P.M. Tourne is a postgraduate student in the Department of Orthodontics and a Fellow in the Department of TMJ and Craniofacial Pain at the University of Minnesota