the aim of this study is to compare cone-beam computed tomography (cBct) and bi-dimensional reconstructed lateral cephalograms (RLcs) in assessing mandibular body length and growth and to evaluate how mandibular reshaping influences the error in measuring mandibular body growth in bi-dimensional radiographs. Twenty-five patients with two CBCT scans taken at a mean distance of 2.21 ± 0.5 years were selected. The following measurements were performed: right and left mandibular body length at each point in time, mandibular growth, inter-gonial distance and mandibular symphyseal angle. From each CBCT, an RLC was obtained, and mandibular body length and growth were measured. Data analysis revealed a statistically and clinically significant difference in CBCT and RLC regarding the mandibular length of each patient at each point in time. However, mandibular growth was almost identical. A linear regression was performed to predict growth distortion between RLCs and CBCT depending on the ratio between transverse and sagittal mandibular growth. The expected maximum and minimum distortion, however, appeared not to be significant. In fact, a second linear regression model and a Bland-Altman test revealed a strong correlation between measurements of average mandibular body growth by CBCT and RLCs. As the same distortion occurs in the first and second RLCs, bi-dimensional radiographs remain the method of choice in evaluating mandibular body growth. Mandibular length is an important indicator of therapeutic success. In the literature, this variable has been measured using different radiographic techniques. In 1931, Broadbent 1 described a method to study facial growth by lateral teleradiographs. Despite some drawbacks, such as variable magnification, different grades of distortion, and limited repeatability of head position, the technique of superimposing cephalometric tracings taken over time has been accepted for clinical and research purposes in orthodontics 2. Several aspects of the growth of the maxillofacial complex have been studied so far, such as the direction and intensity of growth in different cohorts of patients with a sequence of cephalometric radiographs 2-4. The growth of the maxillofacial complex is steep during the first 4 years of life 5 , and it becomes flatter until puberty, when it becomes steeper again during the adolescent growth spurt 6. The timing of maxillofacial growth differs between boys and girls; its onset and peak occur at ages 12 and 14 years, respectively, in boys and 9.5 and 11.5 years, respectively, in girls 6-8. Modifications that occur in the human mandible during growth were first studied by Bjork 9,10 and Enlow 11,12. Small pointed pins were implanted into the mandible and used as a fixed reference for evaluating bone growth. While useful baseline information was provided by this and subsequent studies 2,4 , the data were limited to two-dimensional (2D) measurements.