2023 Orthodontics & craniofacial r…

Influence of mandibular incisor agenesis and growth pattern on symphysis characteristics: A retrospective cephalometric study.

, ,

Orthodontics & craniofacial research Vol. 26 (3) : 393-401 • Aug 2023

OBJECTIVE: This study was performed to investigate the effects of mandibular incisor (MnI) agenesis and divergent malocclusion type on mandibular symphysis inclination and morphology. METHODS: A total of 162 selected patients were divided into two groups: one group consisted of patients with one or two congenitally missing MnIs, and another group comprised patients without tooth agenesis. Patients in each group were categorized into three divergent malocclusion groups (hypodivergent, normodivergent and hyperdivergent) according to the Frankfort mandibular plane angle, with 27 patients per group. Lateral cephalograms were used to evaluate mandibular symphysis inclination and morphology. Two-way analysis of variance, simple main effect analysis and Tukey's test were used for statistical comparisons. RESULTS: The agenesis group demonstrated a significantly greater retroclination of the mandibular symphysis than the non-agenesis group in the normodivergent group. In the hypodivergent and normodivergent groups, the agenesis group showed a significantly smaller area of the alveolar bone with thinner width and shorter height than the non-agenesis group. CONCLUSION: For the Japanese orthodontic patients, MnI agenesis caused a significantly great retroclination of the mandibular symphysis in patients with normodivergent malocclusion and significantly small area of the alveolar bone with thin width and short height in patients with hypo- and normodivergent malocclusions.

No clinical trial protocols linked to this paper

Clinical trials are automatically linked when NCT numbers are found in the paper's title or abstract.
PICO Elements

No PICO elements extracted yet. Click "Extract PICO" to analyze this paper.

Paper Details
MeSH Terms
Associated Data

No associated datasets or code repositories found for this paper.

Related Papers

Related paper suggestions will be available in future updates.