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Journal Article

Citation

Brin I, Ben-Bassat Y, Heling I, Brezniak N. Endod. Dent. Traumatol. 2000; 16(3): 111-115.

Affiliation

Department of Orthodontics, Hadassah School of Dental Medicine, Jerusalem, Israel.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2000, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

11202866

Abstract

Increased overjet and inadequate lip coverage of the maxillary incisors are considered significant risk factors in many clinical studies. The purpose of the present study was to examine this issue of dental injury by actual cephalometric measurements in orthodontic patients. Pretreatment cephalograms (taken with lips in repose) of consecutive patients were used. The patients were allotted to two groups Group T (trauma): 56 patients who had injured their maxillary incisors prior to their orthodontic treatment, mean age at the start of treatment 11.9 years (SD = 1.5); and Group C (control): 98 patients with intact maxillary incisors, mean age at the start of treatment 11.6 years (SD = 1.3). Twelve cephalometric landmarks on the soft and hard tissue profile were identified and digitized and the relevant dental, skeletal and soft tissue measurements recorded. The variables in Groups T and C were compared and their predictive values for possible occurrence of trauma were tested by logistic regression analysis. No statistically significant differences between boys and girls were found. Overjet or maxillary incisor exposure or interlabial gap, each as a single variable, could differentiate between the two groups. Logistic regression analysis indicated that only a small percentage (28.7%) of the dependent variable variation (trauma vs control) can be explained by interlabial gap, gender, upper incisor long axis to facial plane (degree), upper incisor long axis to interlabial gap and overjet.


Language: en

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