OSMF is a severe, pre-malignant condition causing the mouth to aggressively scar and lock shut. Dr. Manish Tiwari provides advanced surgical release and soft-tissue reconstruction to restore your ability to open your mouth, eat, and speak normally.
Progressive inability to open the mouth, sometimes restricting the opening to less than a single finger's width.
Intense burning in the mouth, especially when eating spicy or hot foods, caused by the thinning mucosal lining.
The inside of the cheeks and lips turn pale white and lose their normal elasticity, feeling like rigid leather.
Thick, palpable, guitar-string-like bands of scar tissue forming inside the cheeks and around the lips.
OSMF is most commonly triggered by chewing areca nut (supari) or gutka. When the disease reaches Grade III or IV, medications fail, and the jaw mechanically locks. As a contributor to major textbooks on OSMF, Dr. Tiwari executes definitive surgical interventions.
The foundational step of OSMF surgery. Dr. Tiwari precisely cuts and releases the dense, rigid scar tissue bands lining the inside of the cheeks, lips, and sometimes the soft palate, immediately freeing the jaw joint.
In severe, long-standing cases, the jaw muscles and bones themselves become locked. Dr. Tiwari may perform a bilateral coronoidectomy (removing a small tip of the jawbone) or muscle release to achieve maximum mouth opening.
Cutting the bands leaves raw tissue behind. If allowed to heal naturally, it will scar and lock the jaw again. Dr. Tiwari uses advanced flaps (like the Buccal Fat Pad, Nasolabial Flap, or Radial Forearm Free Flap) to cover the raw areas with healthy, pliable tissue.
OSMF is a pre-malignant condition. Our protocol not only restores your ability to open your mouth but ensures any hidden cancers are caught early.
Because OSMF carries a high risk of transforming into Squamous Cell Carcinoma, suspicious areas are biopsied during the release procedure to rule out oral cancer.
The fibrotic bands are completely excised. The resulting voids are then seamlessly reconstructed using local fat pads or advanced microvascular skin flaps.
Surgery provides the opening, but intense post-operative jaw exercises and rehabilitation devices are mandatory to prevent the new tissue from tightening.
Surgery is generally indicated when mouth opening falls below 20mm (less than two fingers).
The success of OSMF surgery depends heavily on the patient's commitment to post-operative exercises.