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EXTRACTIONS IN ORTHODONTICS 21/01/2015

EXTRACTIONS IN ORTHODONTICS 21/01/2015. Dr.Gyan P.Singh Associate professor Department of O rthodontics&Dentofacial O rthopaedics,FODS, KGMU. CONTENTS. INTRODUCTION EVALUATION OF DIAGNOSTIC ELEMENTS CHOICE OF INDIVIDUAL TEETH. INTRODUCTION.

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EXTRACTIONS IN ORTHODONTICS 21/01/2015

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  1. EXTRACTIONS IN ORTHODONTICS21/01/2015 Dr.GyanP.Singh Associate professor Department of Orthodontics&DentofacialOrthopaedics,FODS,KGMU

  2. CONTENTS • INTRODUCTION • EVALUATION OF DIAGNOSTIC ELEMENTS • CHOICE OF INDIVIDUAL TEETH

  3. INTRODUCTION • Generally there are three reasons to extract the teeth; • To provide space for the alignment of crowded teeth. • For the retraction of protruded teeth. • For camouflaging the skeletal class II and class III malocclusions.

  4. b. Wolff’s Law of bone: • Bone trabeculae were arranged in response to stress lines on the bone.

  5. This led Angle to 2 key concepts: • Skeletal growth could be readily influenced by external pressure. • If teeth were placed in proper occlusion, forces transmitted to teeth would cause bone to grow around them and so stabilizing them in a new position even if great deal of arch expansion had occurred.

  6. These concepts did not go unchallenged. • Calvin Case argued that although arches could always be expanded, neither esthetics nor the stability would be satisfactory in long term in many patients. • This controversy culminated in debate between Angle’s student Dewey and Case. • Angle’s followers won the day.

  7. 2. THE RE-INTRODUCTION OF EXTRACTION IN THE MID 20TH CENTURY. • Relapse after non-extraction treatment was frequently observed by 1930. • Charles Tweed & Raymond Begg, both adapted ‘EXTRACTION WHEN NECESSARY’ approach and treated their patient with this philosophy. • They found that occlusion was stable and esthetics was improved.

  8. Intraoral Photographs (Pretreatment) Frontal U.Occlusal R.Lateral L.Occlusal L.Lateral

  9. Intra oral photographs(Final Stage) U.Occlusal L.Lateral Frontal R.Lateral

  10. EVALUATION OF DIAGNOSTIC ELEMENTS FOR EXTRACTION

  11. CLINICAL PARAMETERS • FACIAL APPEARANCE: • Facial appearance -consideration -planning orthodontic treatment. • Genetic makeup, • Environmental influences, • and cultural background. • How extractions vsarch expansion affects facial appearance is a major concern for orthodontists.

  12. II. SOFT TISSUE PROFILE. • How extraction vs non-extraction therapy affects the profile also is a concern. • Extraction therapy is sometimes believed to be detrimental to the profile.

  13. P R E - T R E A T M E N T Facial appearance of the patient following treatment after 1Yrs and 9 months P O S T - T R E A T M E N T

  14. This is important because, if a patient has proclined incisors or proclined incisors with crowding. • it would be virtually impossible to improve the anteroposterior position of the teeth and the patient’s profile without extractions.

  15. III. MIDLINE: • According to Strang , the harmonic positioning of the midlines relative to each other and to the face is what characterizes normal occlusion. • Any variation in this combination is indicative of improper relationship between the teeth or dental arches.

  16. This requires a careful diagnosis because properly assessing the causes behind midline shifts allows professionals to use unique mechanics and asymmetric extractions. • Patients presenting with severe dental midline deviation relative to the face require tooth extractions.

  17. IV. GROWTH STATUS. • In malocclusions with skeletal discrepancies it is crucial—for the diagnosis and prognosis of the case—to check whether the patient is still undergoing significant facial growth. • If a malocclusion can be corrected with growth response (growth redirection), clinicians can handle the case without extractions.

  18. MODEL ANALYSIS • CAREY’S ANALYSIS: • First determine the degree of discrepancy between bone and tooth structure. • If the discrepancy is 2.5 mm. or less, we do not extract. • If it is 2.5 to 5.0 mm., we extract the second premolars, whenever possible, to obtain better esthetics. • If it is more than 5 mm., we extract the first premolars.

  19. If the discrepancy is extreme (5 mm. or more), in the lower arch and mild in the upper, we extract the lower first and upper second premolars, and vice versa. • When the discrepancy is confined to the maxillary arch, two upper first or second premolars are removed, the choice depending upon the degree of the deficiency.

  20. II. CURVE OF SPEE: • Levelling the curve increases incisor protrusion. • Recent studies conclude the real effect to be closer to 1:3; for every 3 mm of curve levelled, arch circumference increases 1 mm. • The deeper the Curve of Spee, the greater the need for extraction.

  21. III. BOLTON DISCREPANCY. • An interarch tooth-size discrepancy may provide incentive to extract in order to establish a proper occlusion. This diagnostic variable has been popularized as the Bolton discrepancy. • Clinicians have utilized interproximal reduction to resolve interarch tooth size discrepancies.

  22. Bolton noted a 4 mm limit to anterior reduction. Thus, extraction may be necessary to resolve a discrepancy greater than this.

  23. CEPHALOMETRIC VARIABLES • VERTICAL FACIAL PROPORTIONS: • SN-MANDIBULAR PLANE ANGLE(SN-MP) • Schudyutilized the angle formed at the intersection of the sella-nasion and mandibular planes (SN-MP)to aid in his assessments, and found the value of 33 degrees to be average for balanced vertical facial types, with a range of 31 to 34 degrees.

  24. II. FRANKFORT MANDIBULAR PLANE ANGLE(FMA). • The FMA provides an additional vertical appraisal to the SN-MP measurement. • A normal value for the FMA is in the range of 20 to 30 degrees. • Values above these normal ranges are associated with skeletal open bite, whereas values below are typically associated with skeletal deep bite.

  25. III. JARABAK RATIO: • The PFH (distance between sella and gonion) is divided by the AFH (distance between nasion and menton). • The normal value is 61-69%. • Less than 61% suggests a skeletal open bite; greater than 69% indicates a skeletal deep bite.

  26. Treatment geared toward achieving facial balance is more likely to extract in skeletal open bite and not extract in cases with skeletal deep bite .

  27. LOWER INCISOR POSITION: • INCISOR MANDIBULAR PLANE ANGLE(IMPA): • Charles Tweed used the orientation of the mandibular incisor to aid in treatment planning to create facial balance and harmony. • He noted a need for “upright” and “vertical” lower incisors. • Margolisproposed the incisor mandibular plane angle (IMPA) to quantitatively define these two qualities.

  28. He proposed IMPA to be 90+/-3 degrees in normal, balanced faces. • According to Tweed, this value can range between 85 and 95 degrees, and vary according to ethnicity. • Values above this range are indicative of extraction to improve functional and esthetic imbalance.

  29. II. FRANKFORT MANDIBULAR INCISOR ANGLE(FMIA): • The norm for the angle formed by the intersection of the Frankfort plane and the long axis of the lower incisor is 60-70°. • A value less than 60° indicates proclination of the lower incisors, whereas a value greater than 70° suggests that the lower incisors are retroclined.

  30. III. LOWER INCISOR TO A-Pog DISTANCE: • McNamara found the proper position of the mandibular incisor to be 1 to 3 millimeters anterior to the line from point A to Pogonion (A-Pog) in a well-balanced face, regardless of age.

  31. EXTRACTION WIGGLEGRAM

  32. CHOICE OF INDIVIDUAL TEETH • UPPER INCISOR EXTRACTION: • INDICATIONS: • Unfavorably impacted incsor. • Buccally or lingually blocked out lateral incisor with good contact between central incisor and canine. • Congenitally missing one of lateral incisor, opposite incisor may require extraction to maintain arch symmetry.

  33. Grossly carious incisor. • Malformed incisor that can not be restored. • Trauma or irreparable damage. • An incisor with dilacerated root.

  34. 2. LOWER INCISOR EXTRACTION: • In 1905, Jackson described a case in which two lower incisors were extracted at different times to relieve mandibular crowding. • Hahn(1942) advocated the removal of a mandibular incisor to close the space and thus reduce the anterior dentition.

  35. INDICATIONS: • Permanent dentition, • Minimal growth potential, • Class I molar relationship, • Harmonious soft-tissue profile, • Minimal-to-moderate overbite, • Little or no crowding in the maxillary arch, • Existing Bolton discrepancy and • Tooth-size-arch-length discrepancy of more than 5mm in the anterior region

  36. WHICH INCISOR TO BE REMOVED? • Periodontal conditions, • The presence of gingival recession, and • The location of any restorations,including endodontic treatment. • Extraction of a lateral incisor is generally preferred because it is less visible from the front.

  37. 2. USE OF RECTANGULAR WIRE:

  38. 3. CANINE EXTRACTIONINDICATIONS: • Extremely unfavourablecuspid position. • Tooth position unfavourable for orthodontic movement. • Anklosed tooth. • Internal or external root resorption. • Severe dilacerataion.

  39. Transmigrated canine in mandibular arch

  40. 4. PREMOLAR EXTRACTION: • In 1949, Nance stated that the term extraction had, at that time, become synonymous with the removal of all four first premolars. • Augmenting anchorage, maximum lip retraction, better contact between the canines and second premolars , and the fact that first premolars are nearer to anterior crowding are some of the reasons behind favouring their extraction.

  41. Enmasse Retraction of Upper and Lower Anterior Teeth {PreformedT.P.A.=Molarstabilization} K-SirRetractionSpring NiTi Retraction spring

  42. 5. 1ST MOLAR EXTRACTION: • “First permanent molar extractions doubling the treatment time and halving the prognosis” was the phrase coined by Mills. • Daugaard-Jensen suggested that first molar cases are no more time consuming than 4 premolar cases. • Williams and Hosilahighlighted the fact that first molar extraction cases are likely to have less effect on the profile than premolar extraction cases.

  43. INDICATIONS:( Sandler et al 2000) • Extensively carious first molars • Hypoplastic first molars • Heavily filled first molars where premolars are perfectly healthy • Apical pathoses or root canal treated first molars • Crowding at the distal part of the arches and wisdom teeth reasonably positioned • High maxillary/mandibular planes angle (Anterior open bite cases)

  44. TIMING OF EXTRACTIONS: • If the upper second molars are unerupted at the time of extraction of the upper first molars, they will almost completely replace them, thus contributing little space for correction of the malocclusion. • If there is a space requirement in the upper arch therefore, extraction of the first molars must be delayed until the second molars have eruptedsufficiently to allow a palatal arch with Nance button or headgear to be placed.

  45. 6. 2ND MOLAR EXTRACTION: • INDICATIONS(Lehmann 1979) • The second molars are severely carious, ectopically erupted, or severely rotated. • Skeletal Class I malocclusions with arch length discrepancy in the distal part of the arch or with mild anterior crowding and • In Class II "skeletal" cases with only mild crowding of the mandibular arch.

  46. ADVANTAGES: • Disimpaction of third molars • Faster eruption of third molars • Prevention of "dished-in" appearance of the face at the end of facial growth • Prevention of "late" incisor imbrication • Facilitation of first molar distal movement

  47. TIMINGS OF EXTRACTION: (Kokich 1983) • The third molar crowns should be completely formed but extractions should be performed before the roots begin to develop; • The axial inclination of the third molar buds should not be greater than 30 ° relative to the occlusal plane; • The mandibular third molar should be in close proximity to the second molar roots to ensure adequate mesial drift of the third molar as it erupts.

  48. MCQ: 1.Extraction of teeth in conjunction to orthodontic treatment is necessary in order to • To relieve crowding in the arches especially when jaws are not large enough to accommodate all the teeth • To achieve proper sagittal inter-arch relationship • Just as a procedure of orthodontics • Both A and B 2. The decision of extraction is based on the following factors • Patient’s age • Sex of the patient (C) The amount of space needed for tooth alignment (D) All of the above

  49. 3.The decision to opt for extraction should only be made • After careful clinical evaluation • After model analysis done • After cephalometric tracing done • All of the above 4. Injudicious extraction of teeth can cause • Arch collapse • Deep overbite (C) Spacing and tissue damage (D) All of the above

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