| Literature DB >> 33922272 |
Tomasz Jankowski1, Maciej Jedliński2, Katarzyna Grocholewicz2, Joanna Janiszewska-Olszowska2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The sella turcica is a saddle-like structure in the middle cranial fossa on the intracranial surface of the sphenoid bone, visible on lateral cephalograms routinely conducted for orthodontic diagnosis. The development of facial structures follows similar traits to the sella turcica: glandular anomalies may be associated with functional disorders, e.g., altered hormonal levels, thus influencing dental development. The aim of this study is to find out if there is any association between the morphology of the sella turcica on cephalometric radiographs and the presence of dental abnormalities. (2)Entities:
Keywords: dental abnormalities; sella bridging; sella turcica
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33922272 PMCID: PMC8122834 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18094456
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Prisma 2009 flow diagram.
Characteristics of included studies.
| Author and Year of Publication | Type of Study | Study Objective | Number of Subjects | Age Range (Years) | Type of Sella Turcica Abnormality | Type of Dental Abnormality | Verification | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baidas et al. 2018 [ | Case–control study | To test the association between sella turcica bridging with canine impaction using panoramic and cephalometric radiographs. | 62 orthodontic patients with palatally impacted canines (study group) and 54 with erupted canines (control group). | 12–25 | Sella turcica bridging | Palatally impacted canines | 15 lateral cephalograms were chosen at random and traced, and then retraced after interval of 3 weeks under identical conditions. | The frequency of sella turcica bridging is higher in subjects with palatally impacted canines (the occurrence of partial and complete bridging: study group 67.8%, control group 26%). |
| Ortiz et al. 2018 [ | Case–control study | To investigate the association between unilateral/bilateral maxillary canine impaction and sella turcica bridging using CBCT. | 38 subjects diagnosed with unilateral or bilateral palatal canine impaction (study group) and 38 without dental abnormalities (control group). | 10–30 | Sella turcica bridging | Unilateral or bilateral palatal canine impaction | One investigator remeasured 21 randomly selected scans from the impacted canine and control groups after a period of 4 weeks. | Sella turcica bridging occurred in 59.3% and 50% in the impacted canine and control groups, respectively. Thus, no statistically significant correlation has been confirmed between palatal canine impaction and sella turcica bridging. |
| Arcos-Palomino, Ustrell-Torrent 2019 [ | Case–control study | To assess whether there was relationship between the degree of calcification of sella turcica and the presence or absence of an alteration in the tooth eruption direction using panoramic and cephalometric radiographs. | 30 subjects with canine or premolars impaction or transposition (cases) and 120 selected randomly with absent altered direction of dental eruption (controls). | 10–50 | Sella turcica bridging | Premolars and canines impaction or transposition | Duplicate tracings were made by the same author on 20 films on two separate occasions with 15-day interval between tracings to assess the random error. | Subjects with altered direction of canine eruption showed a higher occurrence of sella turcica bridging than controls (the occurrence of partial and complete bridging: cases 76.6%, controls 40.8%). |
| Alqahtani 2019 [ | Case–control study | To compare sella turcica bridge among orthodontic patients with congenitally missing maxillary lateral incisors (CMMLI) using panoramic and cephalometric radiographs. | 49 patients with (study group) and 49 without complete dentition (control group). | 12–43 | Sella turcica bridging | Congenitally missing maxillary lateral incisors (CMMLI) | No data. | Patients with CMMLI tend to have a significantly higher frequency of sella bridging (the occurrence of partial and complete bridging: study group 69.4%, control group 46.9%). |
| Divya et al. 2018 [ | Case–control study | To check frequency of sella turcica bridging in participants with impacted canines and hyperdontia compared with a control group using panoramic and cephalometric radiographs. | 62 orthodontic patients with impacted canines and hyperdontia (study group) and 36 orthodontic patients without the presence of any dental anomaly (control group). | Mean age: Impacted canine 16.92 Hyperdontia 18.87 Control 17.56 | Sella turcica bridging | Impacted canines and hyperdontia | 25 randomly selected radiographs were retraced and measured after 2 weeks. | The presence of partial and complete bridging is significantly increased in patients with dental anomalies versus control group (the occurrence of partial and complete bridging: patients with impacted canine 61,5%, with hyperdontia 43.4%, control group 25%). |
| Scribante et al. 2017 [ | Case–control study | To find any association between canine impaction, hyperdontia or hypodontia and sella bridging using panoramic and cephalometric radiographs. | 163 patients with dental abnormalities—study group (78 patients with impacted canines, 68 with dental agenesis and 17 with hyperdontia), 47 subjects without dental abnormalities (control group). | No data | Sella turcica bridging | Canine impaction, hyperdontia or hypodontia | The same operator re-traced 20 randomly selected radiographs after a period of 6 weeks. | The presence of partial and complete bridging is significantly increased in patients with dental abnormalities versus control group (vestibular impacted canines 73%, palatal displaced canines 69%, congenital absence of upper lateral incisors 66%, hyperdontia 59%, lower second premolars hypodontia 58%, control group 57%). |
| Ali et al. 2014 [ | Case–control study | To test whether an association exists between sella bridging and impacted canines using panoramic and cephalometric radiographs. | 31 patients with palatally impacted canines (study group) and 70 with erupted canines (control group). | 14–30 | Sella turcica bridging | Impacted canines | 30 randomly selected lateral radiographs were retraced and reevaluated by the principal investigator 2 weeks after initial analysis. | The frequency of sella turcica bridging is increased in subjects with impacted canines (the occurrence of partial and complete bridging: study group 80.6%, control group 51.4%). |
| Leonardi et al. 2011 [ | Case–control study | To determine association between tooth transposition and bridging of the sella turcica using panoramic and cephalometric radiographs. | 21 subjects with maxillary or mandibular dental transposition (study group) and 70 without dental abnormalities. | Mean age: Study group 14.5, Control group 13.8 | Sella turcica bridging | Maxillary or mandibular dental transposition | Duplicate tracings of 10 radiographs were made on two separate occasions by the same author with a 2-week interval between tracings. | Subjects with calcification in the region of sella are at potential risk of developing dental transposition (the occurrence of partial bridge: study group 42.9%, control group 68.6% and complete bridging: study group 23.8%, control group 5.7%). |
| Sato, Endo 2019 [ | Case–control study | To investigate the association between bridging of sella turcica and tooth agenesis using panoramic and cephalometric radiographs. | 96 patients with tooth agenesis (study group), 32 without dental abnormalities (control group). | Age groups (mean age): Group A (under 14 years) 10.3 Group B (beyond 14 years) 18.5 | Sella turcica bridging | Agenesis of second premolars or five or more teeth (the agenesis group) | Second measurement was performed by the same investigator who randomly selected 40 cephalograms 1 month after the first examination. | Maxillary second premolar agenesis and severe tooth agenesis had a higher prevalence of sella turcica bridging relative to the controls. However, the severity of tooth agenesis does not correspond to the severity of sella turcica bridging. |
| Leonardi et al. 2006 [ | Case–control study | To investigate whether congenital absence of the second mandibular premolar, or the presence of palatally displaced canine (PDC), is associated with sella bridging using panoramic and cephalometric radiographs. | 34 subjects with dental anomalies (study group) and 101 without dental abnormalities (control group). | 8–16 | Sella turcica bridging | Congenital absence of the second mandibular premolar, or palatally displaced canine (PDC) | Duplicate tracings of 20 films were made on two separate occasions by the same author with 2-week interval between tracings. | The prevalence of sella turcica bridge in adolescents with dental anomalies is increased (the occurrence of partial and complete bridging: study group 76.5%, control group 43.6%). |
Evaluation of case–control studies according to Newcastle–Ottawa quality assessment.
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| Is the case definition adequate? | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Representativeness of the cases | Not described properly | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | |
| Selection of Controls | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | |
| Definition of Controls | Not described properly | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | |
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| Comparability of cases and controls on the basis of the design or analysis | 2 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 2 |
| The authors standardized the procedure of rx taking, the evaluation of landmark identification and examination of sella | The authors standardized the procedure of rx taking, the evaluation of landmark identification and examination of sella turcica in both groups. Proper intraexaminer reliability assessment as well as blinding of examiner was performed. | The authors standardized the procedure of rx taking, the evaluation of landmark identification and examination of sella turcica in both groups. Proper intraexaminer reliability assessment as well as blinding of examiner was performed. | The authors standardized the evaluation of landmark identification and examination of sella turcica in both groups. However, they were described poorly. The measurements were not repeated. The authors pooled together dental abnormalities of different etiology. The study groups were too small to assure low risk of results distortion. | The authors standardized the procedure of rx taking, the evaluation of landmark identification and examination of sella turcica in both groups. Intraexaminer reliability was verified. | ||
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| Ascertainment of exposure | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Same method of ascertainment for cases and controls | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | |
| Non-response rate | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | |
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| Is the case definition adequate? | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Representativeness of the cases | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | |
| Selection of Controls | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | |
| Definition of Controls | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | |
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| Comparability of cases and controls on the basis of the design or analysis | 1 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 1 |
| The authors standardized the procedure of rx taking, the evaluation of landmark identification and examination of sella turcica in both groups. Intraexaminer reliability was verified. The study group is much smaller than control group. | The authors standardized the procedure of rx taking, the evaluation of landmark identification and examination of sella turcica in both groups. Intraexaminer reliability was verified. The study group is much smaller than control group. | The authors standardized the procedure of rx taking, the evaluation of landmark identification and examination of sella turcica in both groups. Intraexaminer reliability was verified. | The authors standardized the procedure of rx taking, the evaluation of landmark identification and examination of sella turcica in both groups. Intraexaminer reliability was verified. | The author standardized the evaluation of landmark identification and examination of sella turcica in both groups. However, no measures decreasing the possible risk of bias were applied in the design of the study. | ||
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| Ascertainment of exposure | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Same method of ascertainment for cases and controls | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | |
| Non-response rate | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | |
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Figure 2Total number of patients included in each study, and numbers and percentages of patients with PDC.
Figure 3Total number of patients included in each study, and numbers and percentages of patients with hypodontia.
Percentage of dental abnormalities in study groups and significance of the difference from general population.
| Abnormality/Values | Mean (%) | SD (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PDC | 30.02 | 13.73 | 4.141 | 0.0054 |
| Hypodontia | 40.11 | 22.39 | 2.856 | 0.0498 |
Prevalence of complete sella turcica bridge in healthy individuals (in chronological order from earliest to most recent).
| Author, Year | Study Material | Prevalence |
|---|---|---|
| Leonardi et al. (2011) [ | 70 cephalograms of Caucasian subjects | 5.70% ( |
| Axselsson et al. (2004) [ | 72 cephalograms of healthy Norwegian individuals | 11.11% ( |
| Kucia et al. (2014) [ | 322 cephalograms of Polish orthodontic patients | 4.97% ( |
| Konwar et al. (2016) [ | 100 cephalograms | 4.00% ( |
| Camp (1924) [ | 110 skulls of deceased people | 4.50% ( |
| Carstens (1949) [ | 461 cephalograms | 4.60% ( |
| Bush (1951) [ | 343 skulls of deceased people | 1.46% ( |
| Cederberg et al. (2003) [ | 255 lateral cephalometric radiographs | 8.2% ( |
| Jones (2005) [ | 150 cephalograms of English orthodontic patients | 7.33% ( |
| Leonardi et al. (2006) [ | 101 healthy Caucasian individuals (without dental anomalies) | 9.90% ( |
| Alkofide (2007) [ | 180 cephalograms of Saudi patients with all skeletal classes | 1.10% ( |
| Dasgupta et al. (2018) [ | 205 cephalograms of Indian patients | 1.46% ( |
| Shrestha et al. (2018) [ | 120 cephalograms of Nepali patients | 11.67% ( |
Prevalence of complete sella turcica bridge in individuals with dental anomalies (in chronological order from earliest to most recent).
| Author, Year | Study Material | Prevalence |
|---|---|---|
| Leonardi et al. 2006 [ | 34 cephalograms of Caucasian adolescents with dental anomalies | 17.60% ( |
| Leonardi et al. 2011 [ | 21 cephalograms of Caucasian subjects with dental transposition | 33.30% ( |
| Ali et al. 2014 [ | 31 Pakistani orthodontic patients with maxillary palatal canine impactions (cephalograms) | 25.80% ( |
| Scribante et al. 2017 [ | Lateral cephalograms from 78 patients with impacted canines, 68 with dental agnesis and 17 with hyperdontia | 9.20% ( |
| Divya et al. 2018 [ | 39 patients with imapacted canines and 23 patients with hyperdontia (cephalograms) | 19.35% ( |
| Ortiz et al. 2018 [ | 38 CBCT images of patients with palatal canine impaction | 7.90% ( |
| Baidas et al. 2018 [ | 62 cephalometric radiographs of patients with palatally imapacted canine | 6.45% ( |
| Alqahtani 2019 [ | 49 cephalograms of subjects with congenital missing maxillary lateral incisors (CMMLI) | 8.16% ( |