| Literature DB >> 34278529 |
Yasuko Inoue1, Toru Deguchi2, James K Hartsfield3, Wakako Tome4, Noriyuki Kitai4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The purpose of this study was to identify pretreatment factors associated with the stability of early class III treatment, since most orthodontists start the treatment with their uncertain hypotheses and/or predictions. Subjects consisted of 75 patients with a class III skeletal relationship (ANB < 2° and overjet < 0 mm) who had been consecutively treated with rapid maxillary expansion and facemask and followed until their second phase treatment. The patients were divided into two groups according to whether they showed relapse in follow-up. The stable group maintained their positive overjet (n = 55), and the unstable group experienced relapse with a zero or negative overjet (n = 20). Two general, three dental, and 13 cephalometric pretreatment factors were investigated to determine which factors were associated with stability.Entities:
Keywords: Cephalometric; Early class III; Mounted cast models; Pretreatment factors; Stability
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34278529 PMCID: PMC8286907 DOI: 10.1186/s40510-021-00371-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prog Orthod ISSN: 1723-7785 Impact factor: 2.750
Fig. 1Horizontal and vertical distances on the mounted dental casts. The horizontal distance between the mesial contact point of the maxillary first molar and the mesial contact point of the mandibular first molar was measured bilaterally. The vertical distance between the mesiobuccal cusp of the maxillary second primary molar and the mesiobuccal cusp of the mandibular second primary molar was measured bilaterally
Fig. 2Linear measurements. (1) Maxillary length (ANS-PNS), (2) mandibular length (Ar-Me), and (3) Wits appraisal
Fig. 3Angular measurements. (1) SNA angle, (2) SNB angle, (3) ANB angle, (4) SN to SN-Ar (SN-Ar), (5) SN to ramus plane angle (SN-Rm), (6) mandibular plane angle (SN-Md), (7) gonial angle, (8) upper incisor to palatal plane angle (U1-PP), (9) incisor mandibular plane angle (IMPA), and (10) Frankfort mandibular incisor angle (FMIA)
Cross tabulations of difference in sex and chi-square test
| Sex | Stable | Unstable | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 30 | 8 | .394 | |
| 25 | 12 |
a Chi-square test with yates correction (Statistical power was .738; Effect size w =0.3)
Descriptive statistics for age at the beginning of treatment
| Total | Stable | Unstable | U test | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| n | X | IQR | n | X | IQR | n | X | IQR | ||
| 75 | 8.50 | 2.08 | 55 | 8.42 | 1.92 | 20 | 9.54 | 2.96 | .465 | |
Mann-Whitney’s U test between the two groups (Statistical power was .840; Effect size d =0.8) (x median, IQR interquartile range)
Cross tabulation of functional shift and chi-square test
| Functional shift | Stable | Unstable | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 40 | 10 | .117 | |
| 15 | 10 |
a Chi-square test with Yates correction (Statistical power was .738; Effect size w = 0.3)
Descriptive statistics and significance probabilities of horizontal and vertical variables
| Total | Stable | Unstable | U test | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| X | IQR | X | IQR | X | IQR | |||||
| 72 | 1.43 | 1.73 | 53 | 1.00 | 1.35 | 19 | 2.50 | 2.10 | .000* | |
| 50 | 1.75 | 1.98 | 40 | 1.63 | 1.65 | 10 | 2.88 | 4.49 | .326 | |
Mann-Whitney’s U test between the stable group and the unstable group (Statistical powers were .840, and .581, respectively; Effect size d =0.8) (x median, IQR interquartile range, *: p < .05)
Destrictive statistics and significance probabilities of cephalometric variables
| Total ( | Stable ( | Unstable ( | U test | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| x | IQR | x | IQR | x | IQR | ||
| 0.96 | 0.08 | 0.95 | 0.08 | 0.97 | 0.09 | .101 | |
| 1.04 | 0.06 | 1.03 | 0.07 | 1.05 | 0.07 | .024* | |
| 79.70 | 4.90 | 79.50 | 4.90 | 80.45 | 3.63 | .260 | |
| 79.80 | 3.90 | 79.40 | 4.10 | 80.40 | 4.43 | .065 | |
| 0.00 | 2.90 | 0.20 | 2.90 | -0.90 | 2.28 | .081 | |
| -6.60 | 3.40 | -6.20 | 3.30 | -7.70 | 2.75 | .035* | |
| 124.60 | 5.60 | 124.80 | 5.50 | 124.20 | 7.38 | .573 | |
| 90.20 | 7.30 | 90.70 | 6.50 | 87.50 | 6.40 | .049* | |
| 36.90 | 6.70 | 36.90 | 6.70 | 36.85 | 6.23 | .480 | |
| 126.00 | 9.00 | 125.10 | 8.90 | 129.50 | 6.83 | .024* | |
| 102.90 | 10.60 | 102.70 | 10.80 | 105.25 | 12.10 | .253 | |
| 89.10 | 10.50 | 89.80 | 8.00 | 83.05 | 7.93 | .009* | |
| 60.90 | 9.50 | 59.30 | 9.60 | 65.05 | 9.43 | .025* | |
Statistical powers were from 0.822 to 0.840; Effect size d =0.8 (x median, IQR interquartile range, *: p < .05)
Logistic regression models using horizontal distance for the unstable groupa
| Independent variable | Logistic coefficient | Standard error | Odds ratio (95% confidence interval) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.992 | 0.317 | .002 | 2.70 | (1.45, 5.01) | |
aDependent variable is Stable (=0) or Unstable (=1)
Fig. 4The percentage of stable cases relative to the pretreatment horizontal distance. The open triangle indicates an outlier. The occurrence of unstable cases started when the horizontal distance was more than 0.5 mm, and when this distance exceeded 3.5 mm, the percentage of stable cases was 0
Logistic regression models using cephalometric variables for the unstable groupa
| Independent variable | Logistic coefficient | Standard error | Odds ratio (95% Confidence interval) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| -0.375 | 0.186 | .044 | 1.46 | (1.01, 2.10) | |
| -0.425 | 0.178 | .017 | 1.53 | (1.08, 2.17) | |
| -0.302 | 0.152 | .048 | 1.35 | (1.00, 1.82) | |
a Dependent variable is Stable (=0) or Unstable (=1)