| Literature DB >> 20948571 |
Ryan A Lacoursiere1, David S Nobes, Darren L N Homeniuk, Jason P Carey, Hisham H Badawi, Paul W Major.
Abstract
Orthodontic lingual root movement (torque) is an important aspect of treatment biomechanics and is typically achieved by torsion of a rectangular wire within the orthodontic bracket slot which introduces a force couple. The magnitude of the force moment achieved by wire torsion may be influenced by deformation of the orthodontic bracket. A device utilizing an optical image correlation technique has been developed to accurately quantify bracket slot dimensional changes during application of wire torsion. Simultaneous torque moment magnitude, degrees of wire twist, and bracket slot dimension data can be gathered. Bracket tie wing elastic deformation when loaded was demonstrated and plastic deformation was also observed with a single rotation of the wire.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 20948571 PMCID: PMC2951109 DOI: 10.4061/2010/397037
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Dent Biomech ISSN: 1758-7360
Figure 1A rendered image of the single axis torque expression rig.
Figure 2A close-up photograph of the wire held in support dies loading the bracket and load cell.
Figure 3A typical image collect from the image system showing the scale and components of the bracket/archwire system.
Figure 4Image of brackets showing the location of tracked regions, (a) the original positions (green box), (b) maximum separation (red box) and (c) final, un-torqued location indicating permanent deformation (yellow box).
Figure 5Images of the bracket as it is progressively torqued by the archwire. Noted with each image ((a)–(r)) is the angle applied by the single axis torque rig.
Figure 6A comparison of the expressed torque (T) (dashed line) and relative change in bracket slot width (solid line) as a function of (a) measured angle and (b) collected sample number.