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1.
J Orofac Orthop ; 67(6): 404-13, 2006 Nov.
Article in English, German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17124559

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: In the current discussion about ensuring treatment quality and reducing costs in the health sector, indication systems with which to determine the need for a treatment and the success of therapy are increasingly being used in orthodontics. These indication systems require the objective evaluation of malocclusions. Our objective was to determine the examiner reliability in the assessment of various malocclusions. MATERIALS AND METHODS: In 180 adults (64 male, 116 female, aged 20-49) from the population-based Study of Health in Pomerania (SHIP), malocclusions were recorded clinically and on models by calibrated examiners. An experienced orthodontist conducted the clinical examination. Another orthodontically-experienced examiner analyzed the models. To compare the model examiners, two examiners with varying degrees of orthodontic experience evaluated 60 of the 180 models as well (29 male, 31 female). One of the model examiners repeated the assessment of 60 models at a later time (intra-individual comparison). RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: Reliability amongst the examiners depended on which malocclusions were judged: crowding and contact point displacement showed little agreement, while cross bite, edge-to-edge bite, deep bite and enlarged overjet revealed greater agreement. Comparison between the clinical examination and model analysis (kappa median 0.57) revealed the greatest differences between the examiners. Comparison of the three model examiners also showed differences. The contrast to the orthodontically least experienced examiner was greater (kappa median 0.61 and 0.62) than the divergence between the two orthodontically more experienced examiners (kappa median 0.70). The intra-individual examiner comparison revealed the smallest differences (kappa median 0.82).


Subject(s)
Malocclusion/epidemiology , Needs Assessment , Orthodontics, Corrective , Adult , Female , Germany , Humans , Male , Malocclusion/diagnosis , Malocclusion/therapy , Middle Aged , Models, Dental , Observer Variation
2.
J Craniomaxillofac Surg ; 34 Suppl 2: 14-6, 2006 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17071384

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: This study aimed to demonstrate clefts of the secondary palate in embryos found to have cleft lip in order to evaluate the validity of prenatal ultrasound examination and, thus, to assess the significance of this diagnostic method for coordination and care of parents and infant. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Over a period of 2.5 years, 7 fetuses with cleft deformities were examined sonographically during the 20th and 25th gestational week. The results were compared to postnatal clinical diagnosis. This study was made by two experienced examiners using 2D ultrasound devices (Acuson 128 XP-10/ C7; Toshiba Aplio XV). Postnatal clinical diagnosis was made by an orthodontist. RESULTS: Three of the ultrasound-based diagnoses coincided with the postnatal result. In three of the examined cases the extent of the cleft was underestimated, whereas a greater extent suspected in one patient could not be confirmed clinically. CONCLUSION: The results of the present study support the propositions of current literature: Diagnosis of a cleft of the lip and the alveolar process could correctly be made by an experienced ultrasound diagnostician. However, problems arise with clefts of the secondary palate.


Subject(s)
Cleft Lip/diagnostic imaging , Cleft Palate/diagnostic imaging , Ultrasonography, Prenatal/methods , Female , Humans , Male , Palate, Hard/abnormalities , Palate, Hard/diagnostic imaging , Palate, Soft/abnormalities , Palate, Soft/diagnostic imaging , Parenting , Pregnancy , Reproducibility of Results
3.
J Craniomaxillofac Surg ; 34 Suppl 2: 45-8, 2006 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17071390

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: The case of a newborn female patient with unilateral cleft lip, alveolus and palate is presented with a markedly sunken nasal wing at the cleft side. This finding may lead to a very unsatisfactory aesthetic result after primary cheiloplasty and nasoplasty. PATIENT AND METHOD: Five months prior to surgery, the patient was treated with a palatal plate and additionally with a nasoalveolar conformer for 4 months thereof. The device consisted of an acrylic pelotte (attached to the maxillary plate with a wire) which lifted the nasal dome and was activated regularly. Under this presurgical treatment, the cleft edges moved closer to each other by 1.8 mm at the alveolar ridge and by 4.5 mm in the palatal area. The nasal wing was lifted by 5 mm. This was enabling elevation of the nasal wing during primary surgery in the case described. Questions are raised as to the remaining effects on nasal symmetry until completion of growth and, on the other hand, as to the chances to reduce postsurgical alar relapse by continued nasal molding beyond primary surgery. CONCLUSION: Presurgical nasal molding seems to improve aesthetics of the nose in patients with unilateral clefts of lip, alveolus and palate and distinctly flattend nasal wings.


Subject(s)
Cleft Lip/therapy , Cleft Palate/therapy , Nose/surgery , Palatal Obturators , Preoperative Care/methods , Alveolar Process/abnormalities , Alveolar Process/surgery , Female , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Lip/abnormalities , Lip/surgery , Nose/pathology
4.
J Craniomaxillofac Surg ; 34 Suppl 2: 62-6, 2006 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17071394

ABSTRACT

PROBLEM: What kind of skeletal differences do exist between juvenile patients with unilateral cleft lip, alveolus and palate treated with or without secondary osteoplasty, and between cleft patients and non-cleft patients? PATIENTS AND METHODS: Thirty-nine patients with unilateral cleft lip, alveolus and palate at a mean age of 15.8 years who were surgically treated with (n = 18) and without (n 21) secondary osteoplasty were compared with a control group of non-cleft patients (mean age 15.1 years). The patients were analyzed using lateral cephalograms. Cephalometric analysis included common sagittal and vertical variables as well as measurements of anterior tooth position and soft-tissue profile. RESULTS: Analysis of lateral cephalograms revealed no significant differences between the two groups of cleft patients. The differences in comparison with the control group mainly revealed maxillary retroposition, a vertically open configuration, a steep position of the upper and lower anterior teeth and a decreased Holdaway-angle (flat midface). CONCLUSION: Secondary osteoplasty exhibited no significant influence on craniofacial growth in children with unilateral cleft lip and palate. Both groups of cleft patients are not markedly different regarding sagittal and vertical skeletal configurations.


Subject(s)
Alveolar Process/pathology , Cleft Lip/pathology , Cleft Palate/pathology , Adolescent , Alveolar Process/diagnostic imaging , Case-Control Studies , Cephalometry/statistics & numerical data , Cleft Lip/diagnostic imaging , Cleft Palate/diagnostic imaging , Female , Humans , Male , Radiography , Statistics, Nonparametric
5.
J Orofac Orthop ; 67(3): 215-24, 2006 May.
Article in English, German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16736122

ABSTRACT

This report presents the case of a female patient bearing a right-side transverse facial cleft. She has received interdisciplinary treatment since birth. At regular intervals, dental casts were made, and profile and full-face photographs, lateral and postero-anterior cephalograms were taken during the course of orthodontic treatment and maxillofacial surgery. We evaluated her diagnostic records with the intent of documenting the effects of growth and therapy on the skeletal structures of the facial cranium and on occlusion, and to show the influence on facial esthetics. Her facial morphology and occlusion were manifest at birth and in the primary dentition. The maxilla and mandible deviated from the midsagittal plane toward the cleft side, with the mandible considerably more affected, revealing a markedly posterior position. The lateral skeletal deviation of both jaws increased slightly during growth, yet the midline deviation of the dental arches and malocclusion clearly worsened. The increasing deviation was not obvious in full-face photographs. Especially in the primary and mixed dentition, the mandible shifted to the anterior, which was visible in both the lateral cephalograms and profile photographs. On the whole, however, no noteworthy alteration in the character of the craniofacial morphology occurred by the time growth was complete, despite functional jaw-orthopedic and maxillofacial surgical treatment consisting of two distraction osteogenesis procedures.


Subject(s)
Cephalometry , Facial Asymmetry/physiopathology , Goldenhar Syndrome/physiopathology , Mandible/abnormalities , Maxilla/abnormalities , Mouth Abnormalities/physiopathology , Orthodontics, Corrective , Osteogenesis, Distraction , Adolescent , Child , Child, Preschool , Combined Modality Therapy , Facial Asymmetry/diagnostic imaging , Facial Asymmetry/therapy , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Goldenhar Syndrome/diagnostic imaging , Goldenhar Syndrome/therapy , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Imaging, Three-Dimensional , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Malocclusion/diagnostic imaging , Malocclusion/physiopathology , Malocclusion/therapy , Mandible/diagnostic imaging , Mandible/physiopathology , Maxilla/diagnostic imaging , Maxilla/physiopathology , Mouth Abnormalities/diagnostic imaging , Mouth Abnormalities/therapy , Tomography, X-Ray Computed
6.
J Orofac Orthop ; 67(2): 81-91, 2006 Mar.
Article in English, German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16570130

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Indication systems such as the German KIG system (Kieferorthopädische Indikationsgruppen = Orthodontic Indication Groups) presuppose the objective assessment of underlying malocclusions. In this survey, we aimed to investigate the degree of agreement among the findings of several examiners in the assessment of different malocclusions and their classification according to the KIG system. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Calibrated examiners assessed in the clinical evaluation and on plaster models orthodontic malocclusions in 180 adults (aged 20-49, 64 male, 116 female) from the population-based Study of Health in Pomerania (SHIP). Clinical examination was carried out by an experienced orthodontist, and the plaster models were also analysed by an examiner experienced in orthodontics. To compare inter- and intra-individual model examiners, we had two examiners with differing orthodontic experience carry out additional analyses of 60 of the 180 models (29 male, 31 female). RESULTS: The examiner differences yielded various KIG classifications and hence different assessments (i. e., whether KIG case-costs should be borne by health insurance). The comparison "clinical examination versus model analysis" revealed differences regarding 16.7% of the study participants in the assessment of whether the expense would be borne by the statutory health insurance fund. At 5.0-8.3%, the number of participants whose assessments had differed was much smaller in the inter-individual comparison of model-examiners and was smallest (at 3.3-6.7%) when comparison was made between intra-individual assessments (by a sole examiner). With regard to overall malocclusion assessment, the greatest examiner differences were again revealed when comparing the clinical examination with the model analysis (median kappa 0.57). The model-examiner comparison revealed larger differences among examiners with less orthodontic experience (median kappa 0.61 and 0.62) than the comparison between examiners with orthodontic experience (median kappa 0.70). CONCLUSIONS: There can occasionally be considerable examiner differences in the classification of participants according to orthodontic indication groups and hence varying assessments of whether such persons are KIG cases or not. Various means of data collection (clinical evaluation-plaster models) in the assessment of malocclusions by multiple examiners and by those with little orthodontic experience may negatively influence agreement among examiners.


Subject(s)
Malocclusion/classification , Malocclusion/diagnosis , Professional Competence/statistics & numerical data , Severity of Illness Index , Female , Germany/epidemiology , Humans , Malocclusion/epidemiology , Observer Variation , Reproducibility of Results , Sensitivity and Specificity
7.
Funct Orthod ; 22(2): 6-8, 10, 12-3, 2005.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16536177

ABSTRACT

In most cephalometric studies on the craniofacial pattern of untreated Class-ll-malocclusion subjects mean values were bivariately compared with the mean values of subjects with normal occlusion or Class I malocclusion, or with standard values. A multivariate approach, which does not merely compare two variables at a time but which analyses several skeletal variables at once, is lacking. The objective of the present study was in a first step to bivariately compare the sagittal and vertical skeletal pattern of Norwegian untreated postnormal occlusion patients with Class I children and in a second step to compare the results of the bivariate analysis with the results of a multivariate analysis on the same subjects. Previous studies showed in the majority of cases a retropositioned mandible rotated to the posterior with an indefinite positioned maxilla. A bivariate comparison of 138 Norwegian subjects with Class II/1 malocclusion and 80 children with Class I occlusion from the same region (mean age of both 9 years) confirmed the posterior position of the mandibles. However, a multivariate analysis (harmony-box-concept) of the same subjects yielded a different result. Simultaneously taking the sagittal and vertical position of both jaws and the cranial base flexure angle (NSBA) into consideration, the comparison of the two groups demonstrated a forward positioned maxilla as the skeletal cause of the Class II/1 malocclusion. The mandibles were on average normal positioned instead of retropositioned relative to other skeletal structures of the viscerocranium. Apparently standard bivariate tests and multivariate analysis methods may lead to different results which also have to be considered by the functionally treating orthodontist.


Subject(s)
Cephalometry/methods , Malocclusion, Angle Class II/etiology , Malocclusion, Angle Class I/etiology , Mandible/anatomy & histology , Maxilla/anatomy & histology , Child , Dental Occlusion , Female , Humans , Male , Malocclusion, Angle Class I/diagnostic imaging , Malocclusion, Angle Class II/diagnostic imaging , Mandible/diagnostic imaging , Mandible/growth & development , Maxilla/diagnostic imaging , Maxilla/growth & development , Multivariate Analysis , Norway , Radiography , Sex Factors , Statistics, Nonparametric
8.
Quintessence Int ; 35(3): 211-21, 2004 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15119680

ABSTRACT

The aim of this systematic review of population-based studies was to establish whether or not associations exist between different types of malocclusions, as well as factors of functional occlusion (eg, occlusal interferences, nonworking-side occlusal contacts) and temporomandibular disorders (TMD) in adults 20 years or older. Defined criteria were employed in the search of MEDLINE and EMBASE databases, as well as in a manual search. Finally, using inclusion criteria (eg, random sampling from residents' registration office files or census lists, adequate response rates), out of 22 preselected studies, four relevant population-based studies on this subject were found. Eighteen studies were excluded because of insufficient description of material and methods (eg, lack or unclear description of sample method, randomization, age distribution), mixed under- and over-20-year-old study population, or different outcome of interest (eg, tooth loss, dentures). The methodologic quality of the selected studies was established with a quality assessment list. The average total methodologic score achieved was 43 out of a possible 100 points. Few associations were reported between malocclusion and parameters of functional occlusion and clinical as well as subjective TMD, and these associations were not uniform. No particular morphologic or functional occlusal factor became apparent. Additionally, the occlusal factors found were partly protective for TMD, ie, subjects with these occlusal parameters showed fewer signs and symptoms of TMD (angle Class II malocclusion, deep bite, anterior crossbite). A positive relationship was only described in two cases-between the number of rotated lateral teeth and subjective symptoms of dysfunction, and between excessive abrasions and clinical dysfunction. In neither case, however, was the strength of the correlation given. In summary, few associations were established between malocclusion or functional occlusion and signs and symptoms of TMD. In view of the small number of randomized studies and their methodologic quality, these results should be verified through further valid representative studies.


Subject(s)
Dental Occlusion , Malocclusion/complications , Temporomandibular Joint Disorders/etiology , Temporomandibular Joint Disorders/physiopathology , Adult , Humans , Research Design , Sampling Studies
9.
Ann Anat ; 186(5-6): 531-7, 2004 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15646288

ABSTRACT

The aim of the study was to analyze the morphology of the viscerocranium in patients with unilatertal or bilateral cleft lip and palate (CLP) who had undergone no surgical intervention of the alveolous meaning that no bone grafting was conducted. In this cross-sectional study 47 patients with complete unilateral (UCLP) or bilateral clefts (BCLP) were examined, and compared to a group of 42 patients without facial clefts. Each group was subdivided into two age groups (ca. 8 and ca. 15 years) approximately before and after the pubertal growth maximum. All patients with CLP received a complete palate closure by means of velopharyngoplasty at age of three, without any alveolar ridge osteoplasty. The craniofacial morphology of all patients was analysed in three planes (sagittal, coronal, horizontal) with help of model analysis and cephalometric analysis. The craniofacial morphology of all groups of CLP patients differed from that of the control groups. On average, more markedly impaired growth was observed in the older age group. Moderate retrognathic maxilla and slight mandible, a coronal skeletal excess, and a remarkable retrusion of the upper and lower anterior teeth were characteristic. Horizontal restriction of width could only be identified in the region of maxillary canines. CLP patients who had no bone grafting showed that the craniofacial developmental impairment was reasonably slight compared to patients without CLP, although it became more pronounced in the older age groups.


Subject(s)
Cleft Lip/surgery , Cleft Palate/surgery , Facial Bones/anatomy & histology , Skull/anatomy & histology , Adolescent , Child , Cross-Sectional Studies , Functional Laterality , Humans , Models, Anatomic
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