1. Orthodontically induced eruption of a horizontally impacted maxillary central incisor
- Author
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Eraldo L. Batista, Maria Perpétua Mota Freitas, Susana Maria Deon Rizzatto, Luciane Macedo de Menezes, Susiane Allgayer, and Raphael Carlos Drumond Loro
- Subjects
Palatal Expansion Technique ,Dentition, Mixed ,Tooth Movement Techniques ,Cephalometry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Tooth eruption ,Bleeding on probing ,Gingiva ,Dentistry ,Orthodontics ,Esthetics, Dental ,Malocclusion, Angle Class II ,Patient Care Planning ,Crown (dentistry) ,stomatognathic system ,Incisor ,Occlusion ,Maxilla ,Humans ,Medicine ,Maxillary central incisor ,Child ,Tooth Crown ,Orthodontic Extrusion ,business.industry ,Tooth, Impacted ,stomatognathic diseases ,Treatment Outcome ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Crown length ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Clinical evaluation ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
This case report presents the clinical features and periodontal findings in a patient with a horizontally impacted maxillary central incisor that had been exposed and aligned after a closed-eruption surgical technique. By combining 3 treatment stages-maxillary expansion, crown exposure surgery, and induced eruption-the horizontally impacted incisor was successfully moved into proper position. The patient finished treatment with a normal and stable occlusion between the maxillary and mandibular arches, and an adequate width of attached gingiva, even in the area surrounding the crown. The 5-year follow-up of stability and periodontal health demonstrated esthetic and functional outcomes after orthodontically induced tooth eruption. Clinical evaluation showed that the treated central incisor had periodontal clinical variables related to visible plaque, bleeding on probing, width of attached gingiva, and crown length that resembled the contralateral incisor.
- Published
- 2013