Amanda6 wrote:If it we me I wouldn't do either of those options and search for an orthodontist who can expand the upper arch instead and keep all the teeth.
I had 4 premolars extracted as a child, and I wish it hadn't been done as it has caused TMJ dysfunction due to the fact that extracting 4 premolars narrows the upper arch. I am currently having orthodontics to treat my TMJ by expanding my upper arch.
There is no magic formula to stably and easily expand the upper arch of a fully-grown adult. If the arch isn't big enough, it isn't big enough. SARPE and/or LeFort I is appropriate for some of those cases, extractions appropriate for others. If the adult arch is simply cranked outwards with a palatal expander (perfectly appropriate treatment for a child), it won't be stable.
Extractions can be appropriate and indicated for a case. They do not inevitably lead to TMJ issues.
It is a mistake to shop for orthodontists by simply excluding every one that calls for extractions. They ARE appropriate in some cases, and if you simply exclude all those that want to extract, you run a very high risk of ending up with an ortho that wins your business by telling you what you want to hear. No, no ortho wants your result to collapse after treatment, but neither doctors nor patients are completely immune to wishful thinking.
There are certainly orthodontic techniques that reduce the need for extractions, and accordingly overall extraction rates have trended downwards over the years. But until there is some sort of magic appliance that will grow bone, they won't go away entirely, especially in adults.