3 months is a lot shorter a period of time with the expander, however generally ortho's who insist on longer are just more conservative and want to make sure that there won't be any considerable relapse. I think if you have a lot of expansion, then the normal period of 6 months with the expander seems quite reasonable to me. I didn't like wearing it, but at the same time you want to make sure you don't relapse a significant amount (although in my case I still need more expansion anyway! )Braceventura wrote:As I said in a prior post, I had my SARPE on July 22nd, 2009. The RPE comes out this Tuesday, October 27th - a little more than 3 months after the surgery.
The OD will place a TPA in and then put on upper braces at that point.
From reading all the other posts, it looks like this is actually a fairly minimal time to have had this 'torture' device bonded in my mouth. However, I am anxious to be able to speak and eat normally again and it couldn't come out soon enough!
I feel comfortable eating almost anything but really dense foods at this point. There is some residual sensitivity in my teeth but it's not bad at all. I still have numbness in my upper gums and a little numbness in my lip but it seems to be getting better and better every week. This had been a very big concern of mine for quite some time since I felt very numb until recently.
From my discussions with others, I think you need to give the healing process at least 6 months before things will be "normal". However, if I don't actually recover all the sensitivity I had before it's not bad enough that I would have opted out of the surgery.
The recovery has, however, been a lot more involved than either my OD or OS led me to believe. At this point, however, it's mostly just annoying, not painful.
In my case, once the TPA was in, it was like I wasn't wearing anything at all. Of course you can feel the wire with your tongue, but in everyday activites you shouldn't be bothered by it
Glad your recovery has gone well. I agree with you, the process brings up annoyances, rather than much pain, but overall it's worth it, and in the great scheme of things not too big a deal.
Are you having further surgery? For a lot of us, SARME is merely phase 1!