Condylar hyperplasia is a temporomandibular joint progressive disease characterized by an excessive growth of the mandibular condyle. Condylar overgrowth represents one of the most common causes of facial asymmetry in early adulthood. To date, there is not a clearly established origin of the disease: genetic, traumatic, infective, vascular, and functional factors are involved hypotheses. Clinically, condylar hyperplasia presentation is characterized by an asymmetry of the lower third of the face, deviation of the chin, inclination of the labial line and malocclusion. Several treatments have been proposed over the years in the treatment of mandibular condyle hyperplasia, but to date a gold standard has not been defined. Two are the main approaches: condylectomy and orthognathic surgery, isolated or in a combination. Many condylectomy technique differentiations have been developed: high, low, and proportional, are the most performed. In this technical note, the Slice Functional Condylectomy (SFC), a modification of the proportional condylectomy is presented.
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