OBJECTIVES: To evaluate whether unilateral functional posterior crossbite in growing children creates an asymmetry in masseter muscle thickness and whether this asymmetry is normalized after crossbite correction. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Two groups of growing individuals were studied prospectively: (i) a treatment group: children with unilateral functional posterior crossbite, undergoing crossbite correction with maxillary expansion; and (ii) a control group: children without transversal malocclusions and orthodontic treatment. The thickness of the masseter muscles was measured bilaterally using ultrasonographic recordings at three time points: pre-treatment (T0); 9 months after (T1); and 30 months after posterior crossbite correction (T2); and at equivalent time points in the control group. Differences within and between the groups were evaluated using paired and unpaired t-tests respectively. RESULTS: It was found that the thickness of the masseter muscles in patients with unilateral functional posterior crossbite was significantly thinner on the crossbite side (P = .013) by 0.5 mm. At T1, the masseter muscle of the treated crossbite side was thicker than that of the previous normal side (0.3 mm difference; P = .046) while this difference disappeared at T2 (P > .05). LIMITATIONS: The lack of the inclusion of an untreated posterior crossbite group, and the heterogeneity in appliances used are the principal limitations of this study. CONCLUSIONS: The masseter muscles in untreated individuals with unilateral functional posterior crossbite are thinner in the crossbite side than in the contralateral non-crossbite side. This muscular asymmetry however is eliminated some time after successful treatment of this malocclusion, possibly due to the bilateral symmetrization of the activity of the elevator masticatory muscles.
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