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Featured researches published by Daichi Hasebe.


International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | 2011

Changes in oropharyngeal airway and respiratory function during sleep after orthognathic surgery in patients with mandibular prognathism

Daichi Hasebe; Tadaharu Kobayashi; Mayumi Hasegawa; Tadashi Iwamoto; Kensuke Kato; Naoya Izumi; Yoshiyuki Takata; Chikara Saito

The aim of this study was to examine the effects of mandibular setback surgery on pharyngeal airway space and respiratory function during sleep. The subjects were 22 patients in whom mandibular prognathism was corrected by bilateral sagittal split ramus osteotomy; either one jaw or two jaw surgery. Polysomnography was performed before surgery and 6 months after surgery, and the apnea hypopnea index (AHI) and arterial oxygen saturation during sleep were measured to assess respiratory function during sleep. Morphological changes were studied using cephalograms taken immediately before, a few days after and 6 months after surgery. As a control, 10 subjects without sleep-disordered breathing underwent the same examinations. AHI was not changed significantly after surgery, although two patients were diagnosed with mild obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) syndrome after surgery. They were not obese, but the amounts of mandibular setback at surgery were large. In conclusion, a large amount of mandibular setback might inhibit biological adaption and cause sleep-disordered breathing, and it might be better to consider maxillary advance or another technique that does not reduce the airway for patients with skeletal class III malocclusions who have large anteroposterior discrepancy and/or maxillary hypoplasia.


International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | 2014

Effects of orthognathic surgery on pharyngeal airway and respiratory function during sleep in patients with mandibular prognathism.

Takashi Uesugi; T. Kobayashi; Daichi Hasebe; Rei Tanaka; M. Ike; Chikara Saito

The aim of this study was to determine changes in overnight respiratory function and craniofacial and pharyngeal airway morphology following orthognathic surgery. The subjects were 40 patients in whom mandibular prognathism was corrected by orthognathic surgery: a one-jaw operation in 22 patients and a two-jaw operation in 18 patients. Morphological changes were studied using cone beam computed tomography immediately before surgery and at more than 6 months after surgery, and the apnoea-hypopnoea index (AHI) was measured with a portable polysomnography system. Pharyngeal airway volume was decreased significantly after surgery, especially in the one-jaw operation group. AHI was not changed significantly after surgery in either group, although AHI in one patient in the one-jaw operation group was increased to 19 events/h. There was no significant change in pharyngeal airway morphology in that patient, but he was obesity class 1 and was 54 years old. In conclusion, some patients who are obese, have a large amount of mandibular setback, and/or are of relatively advanced age may develop sleep-disordered breathing after mandibular setback; a two-jaw operation should therefore be considered in skeletal class III patients who have such risks because it decreases the amount of pharyngeal airway space reduction caused by mandibular setback surgery.


British Journal of Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery | 2013

Changes in overnight arterial oxygen saturation after mandibular setback

Tadaharu Kobayashi; Akinori Funayama; Daichi Hasebe; Yusuke Kato; Michiko Yoshizawa; Chikara Saito

Mandibular setback reduces space in the pharyngeal airway, and it has been suggested that it might induce sleep-disordered breathing. We report on its effects on space in the pharyngeal airway and respiratory function during sleep. We studied 78 patients (29 men and 49 women) in whom skeletal class III malocclusions had been corrected. The mean (range) age at operation was 24 (16-38) years and body mass index (BMI) 21.4 (16.1-30 .9)kg/m(2). Morphological changes were evaluated on lateral cephalograms taken three times: preoperatively, a few days postoperatively, and more than 6 months postoperatively. Overnight arterial oxygen saturation (SpO2) was measured by pulse oximetry 6 times: preoperatively, and on days 1, 3, 5, and 7, and 6 months postoperatively; oximetric indices were calculated. Those immediately after mandibular setback were significantly worse than those preoperatively, although they gradually improved. There were positive correlations between BMI and oximetric indices, and little association between changes in mandibular position and oximetric indices. There was no evidence of sleep-disordered breathing 6 months after mandibular setback because most patients adapt to the new environment for respiratory function during sleep. However, some (particularly obese) patients may develop sleep-disordered breathing just after mandibular setback. In such patients attention should be paid to respiratory function during sleep in the immediate postoperative period, and careful postoperative follow-up is needed.


International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | 2015

Effects of orthognathic surgery on psychological status of patients with jaw deformities

H. Takatsuji; T. Kobayashi; Taku Kojima; Daichi Hasebe; Naoya Izumi; Isao Saito; Chikara Saito

The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of orthognathic surgery on psychological status. The subjects were 119 patients (38 males and 81 females, mean age 25.5±9.4 years) who underwent orthognathic surgery. They were divided into class III (84 patients), class II (20 patients), and class I (15 patients) groups according to the anteroposterior skeletal pattern, and they were also divided into an asymmetry group (51 patients) and a symmetry group (68 patients). We assessed psychological status using the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) before surgery and at more than 6 months after surgery. The MMPI scores for the depression, hysteria, psychasthenia, and social introversion scales were significantly higher than standard values before surgery, and the hypomania scale significantly lower. The cannot say scale, depression scale, and hysteria scale decreased significantly after surgery. A comparison of MMPI scores among the groups showed the depression scale in the class III group to be higher than those in the class I and II groups; there was no significant difference between the asymmetry and symmetry groups. In conclusion, orthognathic surgery has a positive influence on the psychological status of patients with jaw deformities, especially patients with skeletal class III malocclusion.


International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | 2016

Relationships among maxillofacial morphologies, bone properties, and bone metabolic markers in patients with jaw deformities

D. Saito; Toshihiko Mikami; Yohei Oda; Daichi Hasebe; Hideyoshi Nishiyama; Isao Saito; Tadaharu Kobayashi

The aim of this study was to determine the relationships among bone properties, bone metabolic markers, and types of jaw deformity. The subjects were 55 female patients with jaw deformities. Skeletal morphology was examined using lateral cephalograms, and the patients were divided into three groups according to the type of anteroposterior skeletal pattern. Serum osteocalcin, bone alkaline phosphatase, and tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase isoform 5b, as well as deoxypyridinoline in urine, were measured as bone metabolic markers. Quantitative ultrasound (QUS) measurements were used to assess bone properties at the calcaneal bone. The bone volume and bone density of the condylar process were measured in 43 patients by computed tomography. There were no significant differences in bone metabolic markers and QUS parameters between the groups, although bone formation and resorption markers tended to be higher in patients with a protrusive mandible. On the other hand, patients with mandibular retrusion had a higher tendency to have small and dense condylar processes. In conclusion, the results suggest that growth depression or a degenerative change in the mandibular condyle is involved in the pathogenesis of mandibular retrusion, although risk factors for progressive condylar resorption were not determined.


Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Medicine, and Pathology | 2013

Effects of surgical orthodontic treatment for dentofacial deformities on signs and symptoms of temporomandibular joint

Masaki Togashi; Tadaharu Kobayashi; Daichi Hasebe; Akinori Funayama; Toshihiko Mikami; Isao Saito; Takafumi Hayashi; Chikara Saito


Open Journal of Stomatology | 2012

Prognostic predictors on the efficacy of oral appliance therapy for obstructive sleep apnea syndrome

Tadashi Iwamoto; Yoshiyuki Takata; Nobutaka Kitamura; Daichi Hasebe; Tadaharu Kobayashi; Chikara Saito


The Japanese Journal of Jaw Deformities | 2006

Questionnaire Study after Orthognathic Surgery in Patients with Jaw Deformities

Tadaharu Kobayashi; Youhei Oda; Daichi Hasebe; Kensuke Kato; Kanae Niimi; Takayuki Nakazato; Naoya Izumi; Yoshiyuki Takata; Jun-ichi Fukuda; Ritsuo Takagi; Chikara Saito


The Japanese Journal of Jaw Deformities | 2016

Peripheral Facial Nerve Palsy Following Orthognathic Surgery: A Report of Five Cases

Taku Kojima; Daichi Hasebe; Yusuke Kato; Kana Kurabe; Akinori Funayama; Kanae Niimi; Hiroyuki Kano; Chikara Saito; Tadaharu Kobayashi


Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Medicine, and Pathology | 2018

Changes of nasal and oronasopharyngeal airway morphologies and nasal respiratory function following orthognathic surgery

Yusuke Asai; Daichi Hasebe; Isao Saito; Tadaharu Kobayashi

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