RESUMO
Dental splints with wire and composite resin: longitudinal controls. 126 intracoronal dental splints with wire and composite were performed in nearly ten years. Clinical results were good enough, because less than 20% of patients needed further cares.
Assuntos
Contenções Periodontais , Mobilidade Dentária/terapia , Resinas Compostas , Humanos , Estudos Longitudinais , Doenças Periodontais/terapiaRESUMO
Conducted a longitudinal study of hypnotizability, as measured by the Stanford Hypnotic Susceptibility Scale, Form A, that yielded a relatively high degree of stability in hypnotic responsiveness over repeated testings spanning a 25-year period. The 50 Ss were retested in 1985, after tests when they were students, between 1958-1962 and again in 1970. The statistically significant stability coefficients were .64 (10-year retest), .82 (15-year retest), and .71 (25-year retest). The means did not change significantly, and the median change in the scores of individuals was only 1 point on the 12-item scale. A set of score measures and their intercorrelations are insufficient to resolve the issue of why stability occurs. The stability of hypnotizability over time compares favorably with that of other measures of individual differences.