32 results on '"Jacob HB"'
Search Results
2. Comparisons of soft tissue changes after Herbst appliance treatment in three different growth phases.
- Author
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Mariscal JF, Ravelli DB, Dos Santos Pinto A, Dominguez GC, de Arruda Aidar LA, and Jacob HB
- Subjects
- Humans, Treatment Outcome, Face, Mandible diagnostic imaging, Orthodontic Appliances, Functional, Malocclusion, Angle Class II diagnostic imaging, Malocclusion, Angle Class II therapy
- Abstract
Background: This study aimed to compare the soft tissue effects of Herbst appliance in Class II malocclusion patients treated in three different craniofacial growth phases: prepubertal (PRE), circumpubertal (CIR), and postpubertal (POS)., Methods: In total, 95 patients with Class II Division 1 malocclusion previously treated with a Herbst appliance were analyzed. Through the cervical vertebral maturation stages method, patients were allocated into three groups depending on the growth craniofacial phase at the beginning of treatment: PRE, CIR, and POS. Seventeen cephalometric measures were evaluated from each lateral radiograph before and after Herbst therapy using the Radiocef 2 software (Radio Memory, Belo Horizonte). Intragroup and intergroup treatment changes were compared statistically using a paired t test and MANOVA test, respectively., Results: Soft tissue thickness changes were related only to mandible; all three mandibular measurements (L1_LL, B_B', and Pog_Pog') showed thickening for the PRE group ranging from 0.92 mm (Pog_Pog') to 2.02 mm (B_B'), and only lower lip thickened overtime for the POS group (L1_LL = 0.99 mm). Soft and hard tissue pogonion displaced anteriorly, but only the soft tissue showed differences among groups; PRE group presented more anterior displacement than POS group (3.61 mm and 1.39 mm, respectively). Hard and soft tissue facial convexity decreased more in the PRE and CIR groups than in the POS group. Mentolabial sulcus depth reduced more in the PRE (1.07 mm) and CIR (1.29 mm) groups than in the POS (0.55 mm) group. Horizontal movement of the skeletal and soft pogonion presented a moderate-high positive correlation (r = 0.783), and hard and soft facial convexity showed a moderate-low positive correlation (r = 0.403)., Conclusions: Herbst appliance therapy produces soft tissue improvements in the three phases of craniofacial growth, being greater in patients in the PRE and CIR phases., (Copyright © 2023 World Federation of Orthodontists. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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3. Effect of different palatal expanders with miniscrews in surgically assisted rapid palatal expansion: A non-linear finite element analysis.
- Author
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Koç O, Koç N, and Jacob HB
- Subjects
- Humans, Finite Element Analysis, Palatal Expansion Technique, Osteotomy
- Abstract
Introduction: Surgically assisted rapid palatal expansion (SARPE) has been the treatment of choice in subjects presenting skeletally mature sutures., Objective: The purpose of this study was to analyze stress distribution and displacement of the craniofacial and dentoalveolar structures resulting from three types of palatal expanders with surgical assistance using a non-linear finite element analysis., Material and Methods: Three different palatal expanders were designed: Model-I (tooth-bone-borne type containing four miniscrews), Model-II (tooth-bone-borne type containing two miniscrews), and Model-III (bone-borne type containing four miniscrews). A Le Fort I osteotomy was performed, and a total of 5.0 mm palatal expansion was simulated. Nonlinear analysis (three theory) method (geometric nonlinear theory, nonlinear contact theory, and nonlinear material methods) was used to evaluate stress and displacement of several craniofacial and dentoalveolar structures., Results: Regardless of the maxillary expander device type, surgically assisted rapid palatal expansion produces greater anterior maxillary expansion than posterior (ANS ranged from 2.675 mm to 3.444 mm, and PNS ranged from 0.522 mm to 1.721 mm); Model-I showed more parallel midpalatal suture opening pattern - PNS/ANS equal to 54%. In regards to ANS, Model-II (1.159 mm) and Model-III (1.000 mm) presented larger downward displacement than Model-I (0.343 mm). PNS displaced anteriorly more than ANS for all devices; Model-III presented the largest amount of forward displacement for PNS (1.147 mm) and ANS (1.064 mm). All three type of expanders showed similar dental displacement, and minimal craniofacial sutures separation. As expected, different maxillary expander designs produce different primary areas and levels of stresses (the bone-borne expander presented minimal stress at the teeth and the tooth-bone-borne expander with two miniscrews presented the highest)., Conclusions: Based on this finite element method/finite element analysis, the results showed that different maxillary expander designs produce different primary areas and levels of stresses, minimal displacement of the craniofacial sutures, and different skeletal V-shape expansion.
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- 2024
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4. Evaluation of maxillary canine and molar movement during the first phase of extraction space closure: a multilevel analysis.
- Author
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Gandini Júnior LG, Schneider PP, Kim KB, Monini ADC, and Jacob HB
- Subjects
- Humans, Multilevel Analysis, Capsaicin, Menthol, Cuspid, Molar
- Abstract
Objective: This study was designed to analyze and compare the cusp and apex movements of the maxillary canines and first molars during canine retraction in the first step of extraction space closure, and to evaluate if these teeth follow a curvilinear (acceleration and/or deceleration) movement rate., Material and Methods: Twenty-five patients (23.3 ± 5.1 years of age) were enrolled. The retraction of the maxillary canines was accomplished using nickel-titanium closed coil springs (100gf) on 0.020-in stainless steel archwire. Oblique cephalograms were traced and superimposed on the anatomic best fit of the maxilla (before the retraction [T0], and after one month [T1], three [T3], five [T5] and seven [T7] months). Statistics was based in a normally distributed data. Multilevel procedures were used to derive polynomials for each of the measurements. Student's t-test and one-way repeated measures ANOVA were conducted. The level of significance of 5% was adopted., Results: Canine cusps and apexes did not follow a quadratic curve regarding horizontal movement (neither accelerate nor decelerate). Canine and molar cusps showed more horizontal movement than apexes (4.80 mm vs. 2.78 mm, and 2.64 mm vs. 2.17 mm, respectively)., Conclusions: Canine did not accelerate or decelerate overtime horizontally; the cusps and apexes of the canines and molars showed more horizontal movement and larger rate at the beginning of canine retraction, followed by significantly smaller and constant movement rate after the first month.
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- 2023
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5. Authors' response.
- Author
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Jacob HB, Boyer RA, Kurtis Kasper F, and English JD
- Published
- 2023
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6. Clinical feasibility evaluation of digital dental articulation for three-piece maxillary orthognathic surgery: a proof-of-concept study.
- Author
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Frick CJ, Deng HH, English JD, Jacob HB, Kuang T, Grissom MK, Kim D, Gateno J, and Xia JJ
- Subjects
- Feasibility Studies, Humans, Mandible surgery, Maxilla surgery, Osteotomy, Le Fort methods, Orthognathic Surgery, Orthognathic Surgical Procedures methods
- Abstract
Digital dental articulation for three-piece maxillary orthognathic surgery is challenging. The purpose of this proof-of-concept study was to evaluate the clinical feasibility of a newly developed mathematical algorithm to digitally establish the final occlusion for three-piece maxillary surgery. Five patients with jaw deformities who had undergone a three-piece double-jaw surgery that was planned virtually were randomly selected for this study. The final occlusion had been hand-articulated using stone casts, scanned into the computer and used in the surgery. These hand-articulated occlusions served as the control group. To form the experimental group, the three-piece maxillary dental arch was articulated again automatically from the patient's original occlusion using the mathematical algorithm. The hand- and algorithm-articulated occlusions were then evaluated qualitatively by two experienced orthodontists. A quantitative evaluation was also performed. The results of the qualitative evaluation showed that all of the three-piece occlusions, hand- and algorithm-articulated, were clinically acceptable based on the American Board of Orthodontics grading system. When compared, two of the algorithm-articulated occlusions were clearly better (40%), one was the same (20%), and two were slightly worse (40%) than the hand-articulated occlusions. All of the quantitative measurements were comparable between the two articulation methods. In conclusion, the results of this study demonstrate that it is clinically feasible to digitally articulate the three-piece maxillary arch to the intact mandibular dental arch., (Copyright © 2022 International Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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7. Midsagittal Plane First: Building a Strong Facial Reference Frame for Computer-Aided Surgical Simulation.
- Author
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Grissom MK, Gateno J, English JD, Jacob HB, Kuang T, Gonzalez CE, Yuan P, Deng HH, Frick CJ, Kim D, Hassan A, and Xia JJ
- Subjects
- Computers, Cross-Sectional Studies, Facial Asymmetry, Humans, Anatomic Landmarks, Imaging, Three-Dimensional methods
- Abstract
Purpose: A facial reference frame is a 3-dimensional Cartesian coordinate system that includes 3 perpendicular planes: midsagittal, axial, and coronal. The order in which one defines the planes matters. The purposes of this study are to determine the following: 1) what sequence (axial-midsagittal-coronal vs midsagittal-axial-coronal) produced more appropriate reference frames and 2) whether orbital or auricular dystopia influenced the outcomes., Methods: This study is an ambispective cross-sectional study. Fifty-four subjects with facial asymmetry were included. The facial reference frames of each subject (outcome variable) were constructed using 2 methods (independent variable): axial plane first and midsagittal plane first. Two board-certified orthodontists together blindly evaluated the results using a 3-point categorical scale based on their careful inspection and expert intuition. The covariant for stratification was the existence of orbital or auricular dystopia. Finally, Wilcoxon signed rank tests were performed., Results: The facial reference frames defined by the midsagittal plane first method was statistically significantly different from ones defined by the axial plane first method (P = .001). Using the midsagittal plane first method, the reference frames were more appropriately defined in 22 (40.7%) subjects, equivalent in 26 (48.1%) and less appropriately defined in 6 (11.1%). After stratified by orbital or auricular dystopia, the results also showed that the reference frame computed using midsagittal plane first method was statistically significantly more appropriate in both subject groups regardless of the existence of orbital or auricular dystopia (27 with orbital or auricular dystopia and 27 without, both P < .05)., Conclusions: The midsagittal plane first sequence improves the facial reference frames compared with the traditional axial plane first approach. However, regardless of the sequence used, clinicians need to judge the correctness of the reference frame before diagnosis or surgical planning., (Copyright © 2021 American Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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8. Effects of stress relaxation in beta-titanium cantilevers used in orthodontic mechanics.
- Author
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Jacob HB, Gonzaga AS, Trinh B, LE ET, and English JD
- Subjects
- Stress, Mechanical, Titanium, Dental Alloys, Orthodontic Wires
- Abstract
Objective: This study evaluated the force decay and design shape changes caused by stress relaxation in two different orthodontic cantilever configurations., Methods: Eighty cantilevers made of 0.017 x 0.025-in beta-titanium wires were standardized in a passive position, using real scale templates, and randomly divided into two groups (n = 40): Type 1 and Type 2. Each group received a different design (Type 1 with three bends, and Type 2 with two bends), and both were divided in four subgroups (n = 10) according to the evaluation periods: G1 = 24h, G2 = 1 week, G3 = 4 weeks, and G4 = 8 weeks. Mechanical tests were performed immediately after preactivation and at the end of each period, to evaluate force decay. The cantilevers were also scanned and the angles of the bends were measured to assess shape changes., Results: Cantilever forces decayed over time. Type 1 - G1 showed less force decay than Type 2 (10.83 cN vs 17.87 cN). Type 1 cantilevers showed significant force decay only when G4 was compared to G1 (9.05 cN), G2 (11.73 cN), and G3 (9.78 cN). Type 2 cantilevers presented differences when G1 was compared to G2 (9.57 cN) and G3 (7.89 cN). Regarding to the cantilever angle closest to the bracket insertion, Type 1 cantilevers showed significant decrease for G2 (1.58°) and G4 (1.52°)., Conclusions: Cantilevers' design and proximity of the bends influenced force decay pattern overtime. Type 1 cantilevers presented more stable design at the first weeks than Type 2.
- Published
- 2021
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9. Effect of print orientation on the dimensional accuracy of orthodontic aligners printed 3-dimensionally.
- Author
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Boyer RA, Kasper FK, English JD, and Jacob HB
- Subjects
- Humans, Software, Workflow, Printing, Three-Dimensional, Stereolithography
- Abstract
Introduction: Fabrication of orthodontic aligners directly via 3-dimensional (3D) printing presents the potential to increase the efficiency of aligner production relative to traditional workflows; however tunable aspects of the 3D-printing process might affect the dimensional fidelity of the fabricated appliances. This study aimed to investigate the effect of print orientation on the dimensional accuracy of orthodontic aligners printed directly with a 3D printer., Methods: A digitally designed aligner of 500 μm thickness was printed in 3D in Grey V4 (Formlabs, Somerville, Mass) resin at 8 angulations at 45° intervals (n = 10 per angulation) using a stereolithography 3D printer. Each aligner was scanned with an optical scanner, and all but the intaglio surface of each scan was digitally removed. Each resultant scan file was superimposed onto the isolated intaglio of the designed master aligner file. The dimensional deviation was quantified with Geomagic Control software (3D Systems, Rock Hill, SC), and data were analyzed using R statistical software (version 2018; R Core Team, Vienna, Austria) (P <0.05)., Results: Print angle showed a statistically significant effect on standard deviation, average positive deviation, absolute average negative deviation, and percentage of points out of bounds (tolerance bounds defined as ±250 μm) (P <0.05). Qualitative analysis of the 3D surface deviation maps indicated that the 0° and 90° groups showed less deviation and appeared to be the most accurate in the anterior regions. Overall, the majority of the print angle groups studied were not printed within clinically acceptable tolerance ranges, with the major exception being the 90° group, which printed nominally within clinically acceptable tolerance ranges., Conclusions: With the workflow applied, print orientation significantly affects the dimensional accuracy of directly 3D-printed orthodontic aligners. Within the limitations of this study, printing at the 90° angulation would be advised as it is the group with the most accurate prints relative to the 7 other orientations investigated, although not all differences were statistically significant., (Published by Elsevier Inc.)
- Published
- 2021
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10. Cephalometric evaluation of changes in vertical dimension and molar position in adult non-extraction treatment with clear aligners and traditional fixed appliances.
- Author
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Rask H, English JD, Colville C, Kasper FK, Gallerano R, and Jacob HB
- Subjects
- Adult, Cephalometry, Humans, Mandible, Molar diagnostic imaging, Orthodontic Appliances, Fixed, Retrospective Studies, Vertical Dimension, Malocclusion, Angle Class II, Orthodontic Appliances, Removable
- Abstract
Introduction: Orthodontists have been using clear aligners to treat malocclusions, and one potential effect of treatment with orthodontic aligners is the intrusion and/or resists extrusion of the posterior teeth. This "bite-block effect" is primarily anecdotal due to the frequent occurrence of posterior open bites in patients after clear aligner therapy., Objective: The purpose of this study was to compare changes promoted by clear aligners and traditional fixed appliances in cephalometric measurements of the vertical dimension and molar position in adult patients with Class I malocclusion treated with non-extraction., Methods: Pre- and post-treatment lateral cephalometric radiographs of adult patients treated with either clear aligners (n=44) or traditional fixed appliances (n=22) were selected for retrospective analysis. Eight interval measurements and one nominal measurement were evaluated: anterior overbite (OB), mandibular plane angle related to cranial base (SN_MP) and related to Frankfort (FMA), lower molar height (L6H) and upper molar height (U6H), palatal plane to mandibular plane angle (PP_MP), lower facial height (LFH), total facial height (TFH), and posterior open bite (Posterior_OB). A single evaluator traced all cephalographs, and changes in select measures of the vertical dimension were compared within and between groups., Results: OB decreased (1.15 mm) and L6H increased (0.63 mm) in the traditional fixed appliance group. Mandibular plane angles (related to cranial base and to Frankfort) increased (0.43° and 0.53°, respectively) in the clear aligner group, but just FMA showed significant difference between groups (difference of 0.53°). LFH and TFH increased (ranging from 0.52 mm to 0.80 mm) in both groups, with no differences between treatment modality. Presence of visible posterior open bite significantly increased over the course of treatment. OB, FMA and L6H exhibited an interaction between treatment stage (pre- and post-treatment) and modality (clear aligner therapy and traditional fixed appliances), but no interaction among these three variables was found., Conclusions: The evidence does not support the theory that clear aligner therapy produces better vertical dimension control than traditional fixed appliances. Traditional fixed appliance therapy slightly extruded the lower molar, and clear aligner therapy produced a slightly mandibular backward rotation.
- Published
- 2021
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11. Potentialities and limitations of computer-aided design and manufacturing technology in the nonextraction treatment of Class I malocclusion.
- Author
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Moreira FC, Vaz LG, Guastaldi AC, English JD, and Jacob HB
- Subjects
- Computer-Aided Design, Humans, Models, Dental, Young Adult, Malocclusion, Malocclusion, Angle Class I diagnostic imaging, Malocclusion, Angle Class I therapy, Overbite
- Abstract
Introduction: Computer-aided design and manufacturing (CAD-CAM) systems have assisted orthodontists to position brackets virtually. The purpose of this study was to evaluate if a CAD-CAM system could predict the orthodontic treatment outcome of patients with Angle Class I malocclusion with mild crowding or spacing and with no need for orthodontic extraction., Methods: Using the American Board of Orthodontics Cast-Radiograph Evaluation (ABO-CRE) and color map superimposition, the treated occlusion was compared with the virtual final occlusion of 24 young adults with Class I occlusion. Using eXceed software (eXceed, Witten, Germany), we created the final occlusion prediction for each patient (virtual set up group). A digital model of the final occlusion of each patient was created (treated occlusion group). ABO-CRE score was used to compare groups. In addition, a color map was created for all subjects to access the mean and range values between the virtual set up model and treated occlusion model of each patient. Random and systematic errors were calculated. In addition, chi-square and t test were used., Results: Comparisons between virtual set up occlusion and treated occlusion showed statistically significant differences in 3 out of 7 measurements: interproximal contact score was larger for treated than virtual occlusion (0.45 mm and 0.04 mm, respectively), and the treated occlusion showed larger values than the virtual occlusion for occlusal contacts (14.13 mm and 7.62 mm, respectively) and overjet (7.37 mm and 0.66 mm, respectively). Although the treated occlusion showed a larger score than the virtual occlusion (50.41 mm and 34.58 mm, respectively), there is no significant difference between both. Root angulation decreased (from 1.95 ± 1.29 to 0.65 ± 0.71) because of the treatment., Conclusions: ABO-CRE overall score presents no difference between groups. In addition, CAD-CAM setup occlusion closely predicts the final teeth alignment and leveling with interarch relationships showing less ABO-CRE score deduction., (Copyright © 2020 American Association of Orthodontists. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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12. An automatic approach to establish clinically desired final dental occlusion for one-piece maxillary orthognathic surgery.
- Author
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Deng H, Yuan P, Wong S, Gateno J, Garrett FA, Ellis RK, English JD, Jacob HB, Kim D, Barber JC, Chen W, and Xia JJ
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- Algorithms, Computer Simulation, Humans, Imaging, Three-Dimensional methods, Tooth Extraction, Dental Occlusion, Maxilla surgery, Orthognathic Surgical Procedures methods, Surgery, Computer-Assisted methods
- Abstract
Purpose: One critical step in routine orthognathic surgery is to reestablish a desired final dental occlusion. Traditionally, the final occlusion is established by hand articulating stone dental models. To date, there are still no effective solutions to establish the final occlusion in computer-aided surgical simulation. In this study, we consider the most common one-piece maxillary orthognathic surgery and propose a three-stage approach to digitally and automatically establish the desired final dental occlusion., Methods: The process includes three stages: (1) extraction of points of interest and teeth landmarks from a pair of upper and lower dental models; (2) establishment of Midline-Canine-Molar (M-C-M) relationship following the clinical criteria on these three regions; and (3) fine alignment of upper and lower teeth with maximum contacts without breaking the established M-C-M relationship. Our method has been quantitatively and qualitatively validated using 18 pairs of dental models., Results: Qualitatively, experienced orthodontists assess the algorithm-articulated and hand-articulated occlusions while being blind to the methods used. They agreed that occlusion results of the two methods are equally good. Quantitatively, we measure and compare the distances between selected landmarks on upper and lower teeth for both algorithm-articulated and hand-articulated occlusions. The results showed that there was no statistically significant difference between the algorithm-articulated and hand-articulated occlusions., Conclusion: The proposed three-stage automatic dental articulation method is able to articulate the digital dental model to the clinically desired final occlusion accurately and efficiently. It allows doctors to completely eliminate the use of stone dental models in the future.
- Published
- 2020
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13. Clinical Evaluation of Digital Dental Articulation for One-Piece Maxillary Surgery.
- Author
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Wong S, Deng H, Gateno J, Yuan P, Garrett FA, Ellis RK, English JD, Jacob HB, Kim D, and Xia JJ
- Subjects
- Algorithms, Dental Occlusion, Humans, Mandible, Maxilla, Models, Dental, Imaging, Three-Dimensional, Orthognathic Surgical Procedures
- Abstract
Purpose: Methods for digital dental alignment are not readily available to automatically articulate the upper and lower jaw models. The purpose of the present study was to assess the accuracy of our newly developed 3-stage automatic digital articulation approach by comparing it with the reference standard of orthodontist-articulated occlusion., Materials and Methods: Thirty pairs of stone dental models from double-jaw orthognathic surgery patients who had undergone 1-piece Le Fort I osteotomy were used. Two experienced orthodontists manually articulated the models to their perceived final occlusion for surgery. Each pair of models was then scanned twice-while in the orthodontist-determined occlusion and again with the upper and lower models separated and positioned randomly. The separately scanned models were automatically articulated to the final occlusion using our 3-stage algorithm, resulting in an algorithm-articulated occlusion (experimental group). The models scanned together represented the manually articulated occlusion (control group). A qualitative evaluation was completed using a 3-point categorical scale by the same orthodontists, who were unaware of the methods used to articulate the models. A quantitative evaluation was also completed to determine whether any differences were present in the midline, canine, and molar relationships between the algorithm-determined and manually articulated occlusions using repeated measures analysis of variance (ANOVA). Finally, the mean ± standard deviation values were computed to determine the differences between the 2 methods., Results: The results of the qualitative evaluation revealed that all the algorithm-articulated occlusions were as good as the manually articulated ones. The results of the repeated measures ANOVA found no statistically significant differences between the 2 methods [F(1,28) = 0.03; P = .87]. The mean differences between the 2 methods were all within 0.2 mm., Conclusions: The results of our study have demonstrated that dental models can be accurately, reliably, and automatically articulated using our 3-stage algorithm approach, meeting the reference standard of orthodontist-articulated occlusion., (Copyright © 2020 American Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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14. A preliminary 3-D comparison of rapid and slow maxillary expansion in children: A randomized clinical trial.
- Author
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Luiz Ulema Ribeiro G, Jacob HB, Brunetto M, da Silva Pereira J, Motohiro Tanaka O, and Buschang PH
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- Cephalometry, Child, Cone-Beam Computed Tomography, Humans, Maxilla, Palatal Expansion Technique, Tooth
- Abstract
Background: This study compared the effects of rapid maxillary expansion (RME) and slow maxillary expansion (SME) using cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT)., Aim: To evaluate the skeletal and dentoalveolar effects produced by two different maxillary expansion protocols., Design: Eligibility criteria included maxillary transverse deficiencies in children (mean age, 8.18 years old), randomly assigned to either RME or SME. At the outcome analysis phase, a sample of 29 subjects were analysed (RME group, N = 16 and SME group, N = 13). CBCT scans taken before expansion and 6 months later were evaluated. Five posterior and 6 anterior transverse measurements were made at different vertical levels. Treatment changes were analysed using paired t tests; independent t tests were used to compare the two groups., Results: There were statistically significant (P<.05) increases in maxillary width at the skeletal, alveolar, and dental levels for both groups, with significantly smaller increases at the more superior than inferior levels. The RME group exhibited statistically larger width increases than the SME group for all measures except interorbital width, anterior alveolar process width, and intercanine width. The group differences were greater for anterior than posterior apical base widths., Conclusions: Rapid maxillary expansion produced greater orthopaedic effects than slow maxillary expansion, with the greatest effects occurring in the anterior apical base., (© 2019 BSPD, IAPD and John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2020
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15. Effects of transverse bodily movements of maxillary premolars on the surrounding hard tissue.
- Author
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Christoph KM, Campbell PM, Feng JQ, Taylor RW, Jacob HB, and Buschang PH
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- Animals, Bicuspid, Dogs, Male, Tooth Root, Zygoma, Maxilla, Tooth Movement Techniques
- Abstract
Introduction: This experimental study was designed to (1) produce buccal translation of maxillary premolars and (2) evaluate the effects on the buccal alveolar bone., Methods: A randomized split-mouth study was designed based on 7 adult male beagle dogs. The experimental side received a custom cantilever appliance fabricated to produce a translatory force through the maxillary second premolar's center of resistance. The contralateral second premolar received no appliance and served as the control. The premolars underwent 6-7 weeks of buccal translation, followed by 3 weeks of fixed retention. Biweekly tooth movements were evaluated using intraoral and radiographic measurements. Pretreatment and posttreatment models were measured to assess tipping. Three-dimensional microscopic tomography was used to quantify the amount and density of buccal bone. Bone formation and turnover were assessed using fluorescent labeling, hematoxylin and eosin staining, tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase staining, and bone sialoprotein immunostaining., Results: The applied force (100 g of force) translated (1.4 mm) and minimally tipped (4°) the experimental teeth. Lateral translation produced dehiscences at the mesial and distal roots, with 2.0 mm and 2.2 mm loss of vertical bone height, respectively. Bone thickness decreased significantly (P < 0.05) at the apical (∼0.4 mm), midroot (∼0.4 mm), and coronal (∼0.2 mm) levels. Fluorescent imaging, hematoxylin and eosin staining, and immunostaining for bone sialoprotein all showed new bone formation extending along the entire periosteal surface of the second premolar's buccal plate. Tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase staining demonstrated greater osteoclastic activity on the experimental than that of control sections., Conclusions: New buccal bone forms on the periosteal surface during and after tooth translation, but the amount of bone that forms is less than the amount of bone loss, resulting in a net decrease in buccal bone thickness and a loss of crestal bone., (Copyright © 2019 American Association of Orthodontists. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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16. Effect of Yd:YAG laser irradiation on the shear bond strength of orthodontic metal brackets.
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Moreira FC, Jacob HB, Vaz LG, and Guastaldi AC
- Subjects
- Animals, Cattle, Humans, Metals, Shear Strength, Surface Properties, Dental Bonding, Lasers, Solid-State, Orthodontic Brackets
- Abstract
Objective: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of the Yd:YAG laser irradiation on orthodontic bracket base surface. Shear bond strength (SBS) values and sites of the bonding failure interfaces were quantified., Methods: Brackets were divided into two groups: OP (One Piece - integral sandblast base) and OPL (One Piece - laser irradiation). The brackets were randomly bonded on an intact enamel surface of 40 bovine incisors. The SBS tests were carry out using a universal test machine. A stereomicroscopy was used to evaluate the adhesive remnant index (ARI), and surface characterization was performed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Student's t-test was used to compare the SBS between the two groups (p< 0.05). Frequencies and chi-square analysis were applied to evaluate the ARI scores., Results: OPL group showed higher value (p< 0.001) of SBS than OP group (43.95 MPa and 34.81 MPa, respectively). ARI showed significant difference (p< 0.001) between OPL group (ARI 0 = 100%) and OP group (ARI 0 = 15%). SEM showed a higher affinity between the adhesive and the irradiated laser base surface., Conclusions: Yd:YAG laser irradiation on bracket base increased SBS values, showing that bonding failure occurs at the enamel/adhesive interface. Laser-etched bracket base may be used instead of conventional bases in cases where higher adhesion is required, reducing bracket-bonding failure.
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- 2020
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17. An Automatic Approach to Reestablish Final Dental Occlusion for 1-Piece Maxillary Orthognathic Surgery.
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Deng H, Yuan P, Wong S, Gateno J, Garrett FA, Ellis RK, English JD, Jacob HB, Kim D, and Xia JJ
- Abstract
Accurately establishing a desired final dental occlusion of the upper and lower teeth is a critical step in orthognathic surgical planning. Traditionally, the final occlusion is established by hand-articulating the stone dental models. However, this process is inappropriate to digitally plan the orthognathic surgery using computer-aided surgical simulation. To date, there is no effective method of digitally establishing final occlusion. We propose a 3-stage approach to digitally and automatically establish a desired final dental occlusion for 1-piece maxillary orthognathic surgery, including: 1) to automatically extract points of interest and four key teeth landmarks from the occlusal surfaces; 2) to align the upper and lower teeth to a clinically desired Midline-Canine-Molar relationship by minimization of sum of distances between them; and 3) to finely align the upper and lower teeth to a maximum contact with the constraints of collision and clinical criteria. The proposed method was evaluated qualitatively and quantitatively and proved to be effective and accurate.
- Published
- 2019
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18. A 3-D evaluation of transverse dentoalveolar changes and maxillary first molar root length after rapid or slow maxillary expansion in children.
- Author
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Jacob HB, Ribeiro GLU, English JD, Pereira JDS, and Brunetto M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Cone-Beam Computed Tomography, Dental Arch, Humans, Maxilla, Molar, Palatal Expansion Technique, Tooth
- Abstract
Objective: The objective of the present study was to conduct a randomized clinical trial comparing the effects of rapid maxillary expansion (RME) and slow maxillary expansion (SME). Maxillary permanent first molar root length and tooth movement through the alveolus were studied using cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT)., Methods: Subjects with maxillary transverse deficiencies between 7 and 10 years of age were included. Using Haas-type expanders, children were randomly assigned to two groups: RME (19 subjects, mean age of 8.60 years) and SME (13 subjects, mean age of 8.70 years)., Results: Buccal cortical, buccal bone thicknesses and dentoalveolar width decreased in both groups. In the RME group the greatest decrease was related to distal bone thickness (1.26 mm), followed by mesial bone thickness (1.09 mm), alveolar width (0.57 mm), and the buccal cortical (0.19 mm). In the SME group the mesial bone thickness decreased the most (0.87 mm) and the buccal cortical decreased the least (0.22 mm). The lingual bone thickness increased in the RME and SME groups (0.56 mm and 0.42 mm, respectively). The mesial root significantly increased in the RME group (0.52 mm) and in the SME group (0.40 mm), possibly due to incomplete root apex formation at T1 (prior to installation of expanders)., Conclusions: Maxillary expansion (RME and SME) does not interrupt root formation neither shows first molar apical root resorption in juvenile patients. Although slightly larger in the RME group than SME group, both activation protocols showed similar buccal bone thickness and lingual bone thickness changes, without significant difference; and RME presented similar buccal cortical bone changes to SME.
- Published
- 2019
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19. Tooth movement rate and anchorage lost during canine retraction: A maxillary and mandibular comparison .
- Author
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da C Monini A, Gandini LG Jr, Vianna AP, Martins RP, and Jacob HB
- Subjects
- Cuspid, Humans, Mandible, Maxilla, Orthodontic Wires, Orthodontic Anchorage Procedures, Orthodontic Brackets, Tooth Movement Techniques
- Abstract
Objectives: To investigate the canine retraction rate and anchorage loss during canine retraction using self-ligating (SL) brackets and conventional (CV) brackets. Differences between maxillary and mandibular rates were computed., Materials and Methods: Twenty-five subjects requiring four first premolar extractions were enrolled in this split-mouth, randomized clinical trial. Each patient had one upper canine and one lower canine bonded randomly with SL brackets and the other canines with CV brackets but never on the same side. NiTi retraction springs were used to retract canines (100 g force). Maxillary and mandibular superimpositions, using cephalometric 45° oblique radiographs at the beginning and at the end of canine retraction, were used to calculate the changes and rates during canine retraction. Paired t -tests were used to compare side and jaw effects., Results: The SL and CV brackets did not show differences related to monthly canine movement in the maxilla (0.71 mm and 0.72 mm, respectively) or in the mandible (0.54 mm and 0.60 mm, respectively). Rates of anchorage loss in the maxilla and in the mandible also did not show differences between the SL and CV brackets. Maxillary canines showed greater amount of tooth movement per month than mandibular canines (0.71 mm and 0.57 mm, respectively)., Conclusions: SL brackets did not show faster canine retraction compared with CV brackets nor less anchorage loss. The maxillary canines showed a greater rate of tooth movement than the mandibular canines; however, no difference in anchorage loss between the maxillary and mandibular posterior segments during canine retraction was found.
- Published
- 2019
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20. Silver diamine fluoride and bond strength to enamel in vitro: A pilot study.
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Camacho KJ, English JD, Jacob HB, Harris LM, Kasper FK, Bussa HI, and Quock RL
- Subjects
- Acid Etching, Dental, Dental Stress Analysis, Fluorides, Topical pharmacology, Materials Testing, Pilot Projects, Random Allocation, Resin Cements, Shear Strength, Surface Properties, Dental Bonding, Dental Enamel, Orthodontic Brackets, Quaternary Ammonium Compounds pharmacology, Silver Compounds pharmacology
- Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate if pre-treatment with silver diamine fluoride (SDF) adversely affects the bond strength of orthodontic brackets to enamel., Methods: 30 extracted non-carious permanent molar teeth were embedded in acrylic resin cylinders with buccal surfaces exposed and randomly divided equally into two groups. The experimental enamel surfaces were treated with 38% SDF applied for 1 minute between phosphoric acid etch and metal orthodontic bracket bonding with Transbond XT Light Cure Adhesive. Control groups were treated with 37% phosphoric acid etch followed by bonding. All samples were subjected to 500 thermocycles between 5°C and 55°C prior to shear load testing. Mean values and standard deviations of shear bond strengths for each group were analyzed using a general linear model at P< 0.05. Characteristics of bond failure were also recorded via Adhesive Remnant Index (ARI) and analyzed using an ordinal logistic regression at P< 0.05., Results: No significant difference in shear bond strength to enamel was observed between the control and experimental groups (P= 0.65). Comparison of ARI did demonstrate a significant difference between the groups (P= 0.013); SDF significantly altered the characteristic of bond failure, resulting in more adhesive remaining bonded to enamel after failure. No silver staining of treated surfaces was observed., Clinical Significance: The application of SDF to etched non-carious enamel in vitro prior to orthodontic bracket bonding does not adversely affect bond strength., Competing Interests: The authors declared no conflict of interest., (Copyright©American Journal of Dentistry.)
- Published
- 2018
21. Evaluation of the rapid and slow maxillary expansion using cone-beam computed tomography: a randomized clinical trial.
- Author
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Pereira JDS, Jacob HB, Locks A, Brunetto M, and Ribeiro GLU
- Subjects
- Anatomic Landmarks anatomy & histology, Anatomic Landmarks diagnostic imaging, Child, Female, Humans, Imaging, Three-Dimensional methods, Male, Mandible anatomy & histology, Mandible diagnostic imaging, Maxilla anatomy & histology, Orthodontic Appliance Design, Orthodontic Brackets, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Cone-Beam Computed Tomography methods, Maxilla diagnostic imaging, Palatal Expansion Technique instrumentation
- Abstract
Objective:: The aim of this randomized clinical trial was to evaluate the dental, dentoalveolar, and skeletal changes occurring right after the rapid maxillary expansion (RME) and slow maxillary expansion (SME) treatment using Haas-type expander., Methods:: All subjects performed cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) before installation of expanders (T1) and right after screw stabilization (T2). Patients who did not follow the research parameters were excluded. The final sample resulted in 21 patients in RME group (mean age of 8.43 years) and 16 patients in SME group (mean age of 8.70 years). Based on the skewness and kurtosis statistics, the variables were judged to be normally distributed and paired t-test and student t-test were performed at significance level of 5%., Results:: Intermolar angle changed significantly due to treatment and RME showed greater buccal tipping than SME. RME showed significant changes in other four measurements due to treatment: maxilla moved forward and mandible showed backward rotation and, at transversal level both skeletal and dentoalveolar showed significant changes due to maxillary expansion. SME showed significant dentoalveolar changes due to maxillary expansion., Conclusions:: Only intermolar angle showed significant difference between the two modalities of maxillary expansion with greater buccal tipping for RME. Also, RME produced skeletal maxillary expansion and SME did not. Both maxillary expansion modalities were efficient to promote transversal gain at dentoalveolar level. Sagittal and vertical measurements did not show differences between groups, but RME promoted a forward movement of the maxilla and backward rotation of the mandible.
- Published
- 2017
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22. Understanding the basis of space closure in Orthodontics for a more efficient orthodontic treatment.
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Ribeiro GL and Jacob HB
- Subjects
- Biomechanical Phenomena physiology, Humans, Orthodontic Anchorage Procedures methods, Orthodontic Appliance Design, Orthodontic Friction, Orthodontic Space Closure instrumentation, Treatment Outcome, Orthodontic Space Closure methods
- Abstract
Introduction: Space closure is one of the most challenging processes in Orthodontics and requires a solid comprehension of biomechanics in order to avoid undesirable side effects. Understanding the biomechanical basis of space closure better enables clinicians to determine anchorage and treatment options. In spite of the variety of appliance designs, space closure can be performed by means of friction or frictionless mechanics, and each technique has its advantages and disadvantages. Friction mechanics or sliding mechanics is attractive because of its simplicity; the space site is closed by means of elastics or coil springs to provide force, and the brackets slide on the orthodontic archwire. On the other hand, frictionless mechanics uses loop bends to generate force to close the space site, allowing differential moments in the active and reactive units, leading to a less or more anchorage control, depending on the situation., Objective: This article will discuss various theoretical aspects and methods of space closure based on biomechanical concepts.
- Published
- 2016
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23. Re Response to: Mandibular growth comparisons of Class I and Class II division 1 skeletofacial patterns by Helder B. Jacob and Peter H. Buschang. The Angle Orthod. 2014;84:755-761.
- Author
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Buschang PH and Jacob HB
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Male, Malocclusion, Angle Class I physiopathology, Malocclusion, Angle Class II physiopathology, Mandible growth & development
- Published
- 2015
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24. Reliability and validity of intraoral and extraoral scanners.
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Jacob HB, Wyatt GD, and Buschang PH
- Subjects
- Adult, Bicuspid anatomy & histology, Cephalometry statistics & numerical data, Computer-Aided Design statistics & numerical data, Cuspid anatomy & histology, Dental Arch anatomy & histology, Humans, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted statistics & numerical data, Imaging, Three-Dimensional statistics & numerical data, Molar anatomy & histology, Observer Variation, Odontometry statistics & numerical data, Optical Imaging statistics & numerical data, Reproducibility of Results, Tooth Crown anatomy & histology, Computer-Aided Design instrumentation, Mandible anatomy & histology, Models, Anatomic, Optical Imaging instrumentation
- Abstract
Background: This study evaluated the reliability and validity of one extraoral [Ortho Insight 3D™ (Motionview Software, Hixson, TN/USA)] and two intraoral [ITero™ (Align Technologies, San Jose, CA/USA) and Lythos™ (Ormco Corp., Orange, CA/USA)] scanners., Methods: Fifteen dry human mandibles were scanned twice with each of the scanners, and digital models were generated. Five measurements were made on the dry mandibles and on each of the generated models, including intermolar width, intercanine width, posterior arch length, premolar crown diameter, and canine height. Systematic and random errors were evaluated based on replicate analyses. Differences were assessed using paired Student's t tests., Results: Replicate analyses showed statistically significant systematic errors for only one measure (intermolar width measured from Ortho Insight 3D scans). Measurements taken from all three scanners were highly reliable, with intraclass correlations ranging from .926 to .999. Method errors were all less than 0.25 mm (averaged ≈ 0.12 mm). Posterior arch length and canine height were significantly smaller when measured on the Ortho Insight 3D scans than when measured on the dry mandibles and significantly smaller than when measured from the ITero and Lythos models., Conclusions: While all three scanners produced reliable measures, Ortho Insight 3D systematically underestimated arch length and canine height.
- Published
- 2015
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25. An interview with Peter H. Buschang.
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Buschang PH, dos Santos-Pinto A, Araújo E, Ribeiro GL, Jacob HB, and Gandini Júnior LG
- Subjects
- Activator Appliances, Adolescent, Bite Force, Child, Dental Restoration, Permanent, Female, Head anatomy & histology, Humans, Male, Malocclusion therapy, Malocclusion, Angle Class II therapy, Malocclusion, Angle Class III etiology, Malocclusion, Angle Class III therapy, Mandible anatomy & histology, Maxillofacial Development physiology, Orthodontic Anchorage Procedures instrumentation, Orthodontic Appliance Design, Orthodontic Appliances, Functional, Orthodontic Retainers, Recurrence, Rotation, Tooth Movement Techniques instrumentation, Tooth Movement Techniques methods
- Abstract
Dr. Peter Buschang is regent professor and director of orthodontic research. He has been at Texas A&M University Baylor College of Dentistry since 1988. Dr. Buschang received his PhD in 1980 from the University of Texas at Austin; he spent 3 years as a NIDR postdoctoral fellow at the University of Connecticut, and five years as a FRSQ scholar at the University of Montreal. Every year, Dr. Buschang teaches in 16 different courses, 7 of which he directs. In addition to more than 100 lecture hours per year, he spends hundreds of hours mentoring students. For his teaching efforts, Dr. Buschang was awarded the Robert E. Gaylord Award of Excellence in Orthodontic education in 1992, 1998, 2004, and 2010. He also gives 1-2 day evidence-based CE courses throughout the world. The residents he has taught recently honored him by pledging to fund the Peter H. Buschang Endowed Professorship of Orthodontics. His research interests pertain to craniofacial growth and assessment of treatment effects. Dr. Buschang has been funded regularly over the years by the Medical Research Council of Canada, Fonds de le Recherche en Santé du Québec, the NIH, and the American Association of Orthodontics Foundation. He has mentored over 140 Master's and PhD students, and 49 dental students. Dr. Buschang has published over 250 peer-reviewed articles, 15 book chapters and 198 abstracts. He has given over 150 invited talks and lectures in 14 different countries. For his work with the American Board of Orthodontics, Dr. Buschang was awarded the Earl E. and Wilma S. Shepard Award. Dr. Buschang is the only non-orthodontist ever to have been made an honorary member of both the American Association of Orthodontics (2005) and the Edward H. Angle Society of Orthodontics (2009), the two most prestigious orthodontic groups.
- Published
- 2014
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26. Second molar impaction associated with lip bumper therapy.
- Author
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Jacob HB, LeMert S, Alexander RG, and Buschang PH
- Subjects
- Cephalometry methods, Child, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Incisor pathology, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Mandible pathology, Palatal Expansion Technique instrumentation, Radiography, Panoramic, Retrospective Studies, Tooth Eruption physiology, Tooth Movement Techniques instrumentation, Molar pathology, Orthodontic Appliance Design, Orthodontic Appliances adverse effects, Tooth, Impacted etiology
- Abstract
Introduction: Although lip bumpers (LBs) provide significant clinical gain of mandibular arch perimeter in mixed-dentition patients, orthodontists are reluctant to use them due to the possibility of permanent second molar eruptive disturbances., Objective: The present study was conducted to assess second molar impaction associated with the use of LBs, and to investigate how they can be solved., Material and Methods: Lateral and panoramic radiographs of 67 patients (34 females and 33 males) were assessed prior (T₁) and post-LB treatment (T₂). LB therapy lasted for approximately 1.8 ± 0.9 years. Concomitant rapid palatal expansion (RPE) was performed in the maxilla at LB treatment onset. Impaction of mandibular second molars was assessed by means of panoramic radiographs in relation to the position of first mandibular molars. Horizontal and vertical movements of first and second molars were assessed cephalometrically on lateral cephalometric radiographs based on mandibular superimpositions., Results: Eight (11.9%) patients had impacted second molars at the end of LB therapy. Two patients required surgical correction, whereas five required spacers and one patient was self-corrected. Mandibular first molar tip and apex migrated forward 1.3 mm and 2.3 mm, respectively. Second molar tip showed no statistically significant horizontal movement., Conclusion: Although LB therapy increased the risk of second molar impaction, impactions were, in most instances, easily solved.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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27. Mandibular growth comparisons of Class I and Class II division 1 skeletofacial patterns.
- Author
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Jacob HB and Buschang PH
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Age Factors, Anatomic Landmarks growth & development, Anatomic Landmarks pathology, Cephalometry methods, Child, Chin growth & development, Chin pathology, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Malocclusion, Angle Class I pathology, Malocclusion, Angle Class II pathology, Mandible pathology, Mandibular Condyle growth & development, Mandibular Condyle pathology, Maxilla growth & development, Maxilla pathology, Nasal Bone growth & development, Nasal Bone pathology, Prognathism pathology, Prognathism physiopathology, Retrognathia pathology, Retrognathia physiopathology, Sella Turcica growth & development, Sella Turcica pathology, Sex Factors, Malocclusion, Angle Class I physiopathology, Malocclusion, Angle Class II physiopathology, Mandible growth & development
- Abstract
Objective: To determine class and sex differences in mandibular growth and modeling., Materials and Methods: A mixed-longitudinal sample of 130 untreated French-Canadian adolescents, 77 (45 boys and 32 girls) with Class I (normal or abnormal) occlusion and 53 (26 boys and 27 girls) with Class II division 1 malocclusion, was used. Based on eight landmarks, eight traditional measurements were used to compare the anteroposterior position of the maxilla and mandible, relationship between the jaws, and mandibular size. Mandibular superimpositions were used to compare the horizontal and vertical changes of condylion, gonion, and menton., Results: While there were no differences in maxillary position based on the SNA angle, Class IIs had more retrognathic mandibles than did Class Is. Total mandibular length was greater in Class Is than in Class IIs at 15 years of age. Superior and total growth and modeling changes at condylion and gonion, respectively, were greater for Class Is than Class IIs. Boys were more prognathic than girls; they had larger mandibles and exhibited greater size increases and growth changes than girls did., Conclusions: There are both class and sex differences in mandibular growth and modeling.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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28. Dental and skeletal components of Class II open bite treatment with a modified Thurow appliance.
- Author
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Jacob HB, dos Santos-Pinto A, and Buschang PH
- Subjects
- Alveolar Process pathology, Anatomic Landmarks pathology, Case-Control Studies, Cephalometry methods, Child, Chin pathology, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Incisor pathology, Male, Malocclusion, Angle Class II pathology, Mandible pathology, Mandibular Condyle pathology, Maxilla pathology, Molar pathology, Nasal Bone pathology, Open Bite pathology, Palatal Expansion Technique instrumentation, Palate pathology, Retrospective Studies, Rotation, Sella Turcica pathology, Tooth Movement Techniques instrumentation, Vertical Dimension, Extraoral Traction Appliances, Malocclusion, Angle Class II therapy, Open Bite therapy, Orthodontic Appliance Design
- Abstract
Introduction: Due to the lack of studies that distinguish between dentoalveolar and basal changes caused by the Thurow appliance, this clinical study, carried out by the School of Dentistry--State University of São Paulo/Araraquara, aimed at assessing the dental and skeletal changes induced by modified Thurow appliance., Methods: The sample included an experimental group comprising 13 subjects aged between 7 and 10 years old, with Class II malocclusion and anterior open bite, and a control group comprising 22 subjects similar in age, sex and mandibular plane angle. Maxillary/mandibular, horizontal/vertical, dental/skeletal movements (ANS, PNS, U1, U6, Co, Go, Pog, L1, L6) were assessed, based on 14 landmarks, 8 angles (S-N-ANS, SNA, PPA, S-N-Pog, SNB, MPA, PP/MPA, ANB) and 3 linear measures (N-Me, ANS-Me, S-Go)., Results: Treatment caused significantly greater angle decrease between the palatal and the mandibular plane on the experimental group, primarily due to an increase in the palatal plane angle. ANB, SNA and S-N-ANS angles significantly decreased more in patients from the experimental group. PNS was superiorly remodeled. Lower face height (ANS-Me) decreased in the experimental group and increased in the control group., Conclusions: The modified Thurow appliance controlled vertical and horizontal displacements of the maxilla, rotated the maxilla and improved open bite malocclusion, decreasing lower facial height.
- Published
- 2014
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29. Female adolescent craniofacial growth spurts: real or fiction?
- Author
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Buschang PH, Jacob HB, and Demirjian A
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Cephalometry, Child, Female, Humans, Frontal Bone growth & development, Mandible growth & development, Maxilla growth & development, Skull Base growth & development
- Abstract
The purpose of the study is to determine whether the various aspects of the craniofacial complex exhibit female adolescent growth spurts. Multilevel polynomial models were used to estimate the growth curves of a mixed-longitudinal sample of 111 untreated females 10-15 years of age. To evaluate the horizontal and vertical movements of the individual landmarks relative to stable structures, the tracings were superimposed on the natural reference structures in the anterior cranial base. The horizontal and vertical growth changes of four landmarks and the changes of three traditional linear measurements were evaluated. Posterior nasal spine (PNS) moved posteriorly at a constant rate of approximately 0.12mm/year. Five measures showed changes in growth velocity (i.e. quadratic growth curves) but not adolescent growth spurts, including the anterior movements of anterior nasal spine (ANS) and pogonion (Pg), the inferior movements of gonion (Go), and the increases in ANS-PNS and condylion to pogonion (Co-Pg). Five measurements, including the inferior movements of ANS, PNS and Pg, the posterior movements of Go, and the increases of Go-Pg exhibited adolescent growth spurts. Peak growth velocities were attained between 11.4 and 12.8 years of age, approximately 0.7-1.4 years earlier in the maxilla than mandible. While the vertical aspects of craniofacial growth exhibit distinct female adolescent growth spurts, with peak rates occurring earlier in the maxilla than mandible, most horizontal aspects of craniofacial growth do not exhibit an adolescent spurt.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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30. Class II malocclusion treatment using high-pull headgear with a splint: a systematic review.
- Author
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Jacob HB, Buschang PH, and dos Santos-Pinto A
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Orthodontics, Corrective methods, Treatment Outcome, Extraoral Traction Appliances, Malocclusion, Angle Class II therapy, Orthodontics, Corrective instrumentation
- Abstract
Objective: To systematically review the scientific evidence regarding the effectiveness of high-pull headgear in growing Class II subjects., Methods: A literature survey was performed by electronic database search. The survey covered the period from January 1966 to December 2008 and used Medical Subject Headings (MeSH). Articles were initially selected based on their titles and abstracts; the full articles were then retrieved. The inclusion criteria included growing subjects with 8 to 15 years of age, Class II malocclusion treatment with high-pull headgear, and a control group with Class II malocclusion. References from selected articles were hand-searched for additional publications. Selected studies were evaluated methodologically., Results: Four articles were selected; none were randomized controlled trials. All of the articles clearly formulated their objectives and used appropriate measures. The studies showed that high-pull headgear treatment improves skeletal and dental relationship, distal displacement of the maxilla, vertical eruption control and upper molars distalization. One of the studies showed a slight clockwise rotation of the palatal plane; the others showed no significant treatment effect. The mandible was not affected by the treatment., Conclusions: While there is still a lack of strong evidence demonstrating the effects of high-pull headgear with a splint, other studies indicate that the anteroposterior relations improve due to distalization of the maxilla and upper molars, with little or no treatment effects in the mandible. Greater attention to the design should be given to improve the quality of such trials.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Accidental swallowing of orthodontic expansion appliance key.
- Author
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Monini Ada C, Maia LG, Jacob HB, and Gandini LG Jr
- Subjects
- Child, Deglutition, Humans, Male, Dental Instruments adverse effects, Foreign Bodies etiology, Palatal Expansion Technique instrumentation, Stomach
- Abstract
Ingestion of a foreign object, including a dental object, can lead to a trip to the emergency room. This article describes the accidental swallowing of a key that was used to activate a rapid maxillary expander. An orthodontic patient swallowed the key while trying to activate the appliance at home. The object's trajectory was followed on radiographs until it was eliminated. Possible clinical complications, legal implications of this situation, and practices for prevention are described., (Copyright © 2011 American Association of Orthodontists. Published by Mosby, Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Maxillary ulceration resulting from using a rapid maxillary expander in a diabetic patient.
- Author
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Maia LG, Monini Ada C, Jacob HB, and Gandini LG Jr
- Subjects
- Child, Female, Humans, Maxilla pathology, Palatal Expansion Technique adverse effects, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 complications, Oral Ulcer etiology, Orthodontic Appliances adverse effects, Palatal Expansion Technique instrumentation
- Abstract
One of the characteristics of diabetes mellitus is the exaggerated inflammatory response. The present report shows the reaction from the use of a rapid maxillary expander in a diabetic patient. A 9-year-old child presented an uncommon reaction to the treatment with a rapid maxillary expander, and on follow-up examination, it was discovered that the patient had diabetes mellitus. After controlling the disease, the proposed treatment was used without further incidents. The case calls attention to the presence of uncommon responses to treatment and the need for the orthodontist to suspect a patient's systemic compromise.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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