%0 Journal Article %T Bilateral sagittal split osteotomy training on mandibular 3-dimensional printed models for maxillofacial surgical residents. %A Bertin H %A Huon JF %A Praud M %A Fauvel F %A Salagnac JM %A Perrin JP %A Mercier JM %A Corre P %J Br J Oral Maxillofac Surg %V 58 %N 8 %D 10 2020 %M 32624265 %F 2.018 %R 10.1016/j.bjoms.2020.04.039 %X Complications with bilateral sagittal split osteotomy (BSSO) can sometimes result from surgical inexperience. Our aim was to present a 3-dimensional printed mandibular model for BSSO training in a maxillofacial surgical education programme. A polymethacrylate mandibular model obtained from mandibular cone-beam computed tomographic (CT) images was designed and printed for use in training. Twenty-four residents were each asked to do a BSSO according to the Epker/Dal-Pont technique. The session was conducted as a simulation course with a final debriefing. A questionnaire before and after the test was filled in using a 10-point Likert scale to assess the participants' knowledge. The mandibular model provided a realistic way of handling the trabecular bone after cortical osteotomy, as well as in the splitting phase. Significant increases in knowledge and surgical skills were noted for all steps of the BSSO, particularly regarding the use of the piezoelectric device for osteotomy, and for management of wisdom teeth in the splitting zone (3.00 ±2.16 to 6.95 ±2.06 and 2.73 ±1.91 to 5.75 ±2.63, respectively; p1=0.0002 and p2=0.0003). We think that this is a valuable printed mandibular model for the development of surgical skills for BSSO in maxillofacial surgical residents.