| Literature DB >> 36009649 |
Efstratios Ferdianakis1, Ioannis Lyros1, Ioannis A Tsolakis2, Antigoni Alexiou1, Konstantina Alexiou3, Apostolos I Tsolakis1,4.
Abstract
Skeletal Class II malocclusion is the most common skeletal anomaly in orthodontics. Growth in the body of the deficient mandible is induced by periosteal apposition and endochondral ossification in the condyle. Functional appliances have been used in the correction of Class II malocclusions by inducing mandibular growth. Despite their utilization though, their effect still remains controversial. The aim of the present study is to review the existing literature regarding the effects of mandibular protrusion in mandibular growth of growing rats. A protocol was followed according to the guidelines of the Cohrane Handbook for Systematic Reviews. Databases were searched using a specific algorithm. From the ten studies finally analyzed, we conclude that the use of a functional appliance in growing rats induces cell proliferation and bone formation in their condyles, resulting in mandibular growth.Entities:
Keywords: functional appliances; mandibular anterior displacement; mandibular protrusion; rats
Year: 2022 PMID: 36009649 PMCID: PMC9405253 DOI: 10.3390/ani12162059
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animals (Basel) ISSN: 2076-2615 Impact factor: 3.231
Eligibility criteria according to PICOS.
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Figure 1Flowchart of article selection.
Studies included in the research.
| Article | Sample | Intervention | Method of Assessment | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wang et al. 2018 [ | 40 6-week-old female Wistar rats Control Growth hormone Functional appliance Functional appliance and growth hormone | Functional appliance (inclined plane on upper incisors and occlusal plane on lower incisors) and growth hormone used. |
CBCT Cephalometric radiograph Histological analysis | Experimental groups had statistically significant differences in mandibular growth with the control group. No differences among experimental groups. |
| Rabie et al. 2008 [ | 335 rats Group 1 with 4 mm protrusion Group 2 with 2 mm protrusion Control group no appliance | Bite-jumping appliance: inclined planes bonded on both upper and lower incisors | Immunohistology | 4mm protrusion group showed more bone formation than the 2mm group and the control group. |
| Owtad et al. 2011 [ | 55 24-days-old female Sprague–Dawley rats | Crown former on lower incisors that caused a mandibular forward and downward positioning. | Immunohistology (FFG8) | FFG8 expression greater in condyle and glenoid fossa of experimental group, thus concluding bone formation. Condylar cartilage depicts endochondral ossification, whereas glenoid fossa intramembranous ossification. |
| Oksayan et al. 2014 [ | 24 8-week-old male Wistar albino rats | Bite-jumping appliance on mandibular incisors (3.5 mm anterior displacement) | Lateral cephalometric X-ray | Increased mandibular and condylar growth but not in the vertical dimension. |
| Tewson et al. 1988 [ | 114 male 4-week-old Lister Hood and Sprague–Dawley rats | Removable bite plate retainer 10 h a day (2 mm anterior displacement, 3 mm inferior) |
Histological analysis Autoradiography | No differences in control and experimental groups. |
| Tonge et al. 1982 [ | 55 female Lister Hood rats | Cast gold bite plane on upper incisors and stainless-steel mesh with elastics | Histological analysis | Differences observed only 30 days after the beginning of experiment. |
| Marques et al. 2008 [ | 56 28-day-old male Wistar rats | Inclined plane 6 h a day |
Histological analysis Real time PCR |
Fibronectin increases 15 days after start of experiment Cell proliferation increases on the anterior region of the condyle |
| Shen et al. 2006 [ |
100 Sprague–Dawley rats 5 weeks of age | Bite-jumping appliance on upper incisors (3.5 mm forward positioning) | Histological analysis | Condylar forward positioning results in enhanced maturation of chondrocytes and increased type X collagen synthesis. |
| Rabie et al. 2003 [ | 160 5-week-old female Sprague–Dawley rats | Bite-jumping appliances on upper incisors | Histological analysis | Forward mandibular positioning accelerates and enhances chondrocyte differentiation and cartilage formation. |
| Hajjar et al. 2003 [ | 70 21-day-old Wistar rats |
Inclined plane on upper incisors 10 h a day | Histological analysis | Increase of IGF I and IGF II showing their important role in cell differentiation and remodeling of the mandible. |
Risk of bias. Each study was assessed according to signaling questions: Was the sample randomly selected? Was the experiment procedure blinded? Was the result assessment blinded? Did any data go missing during or at the end of the experiment from any group? Is there a reporting bias?
| Studies |
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| Wang et al. 2018 [ | Low | High | High | Low | Low |
| Rabie et al. 2008 [ | Low | High | High | Low | Low |
| Owtad et al. 2011 [ | Low | High | Low | High | Low |
| Oksayan et al. 2014 [ | Low | High | Unclear | Low | Unclear |
| Tewson et al. 1988 [ | High | High | Low | Unclear | Low |
| Tonge et al. 1982 [ | High | High | High | Low | Unclear |
| Marques et al. 2008 [ | Unclear | High | High | Low | Low |
| Shen et al. 2006 [ | Low | High | Low | Low | Low |
| Rabie et al. 2003 [ | Low | High | High | Low | Low |
| Hajjar et al. 2003 [ | High | High | High | Low | Unclear |