| Literature DB >> 29192356 |
Luis Huanca Ghislanzoni1,2, Roberta Lione3, Paola Cozza3, Lorenzo Franchi4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Geometric morphometrics (GMM) has been traditionally applied to the field of biology to study developmental differentiations between species. Orthodontics deals with the shape and size of the face and its components. While several tools have been used to measure size, proportions, and relations between anatomical components, shape has been mainly described by esthetic criteria. The purpose of this paper is to present methods to measure shape of 3D orthodontic data, beyond the conventional tools that have been traditionally used in cephalometrics and in facial and dental cast analysis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29192356 PMCID: PMC5709253 DOI: 10.1186/s40510-017-0194-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prog Orthod ISSN: 1723-7785 Impact factor: 2.750
Fig. 1The template of 240 landmarks and semi-landmarks used to study the palatal shape
Fig. 2Clusterized results: in green, nose breather/controls; in red, mouth breathers/patients. On the x-axis PC1, on the y-axis PC2 from Principal Component Analysis calculation
Fig. 3On the left, PC1 resulted into 50% of variability source: the main difference consisted of a larger and shorter palatal vault height vs a narrower and higher palate. Blue lines show the trend of mouth breathers; red lines show the trend of nasal breathers
Fig. 4Colorimetric maps showing the differences in shape after superimposition between the average palate of mouth breathers and nasal breathers: the palate is narrower and higher in mouth breathers