View clinical trials related to Malocclusion.
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The aim of this study is to compare the efficacy and safety of drug therapy, tonsillar adenoidectomy only, orthodontic treatment only and tonsillar adenoidectomy plus orthodontic treatment in children with obstructive sleep apnea hypopnea syndrome (OSAHS) and malocclusion. In this study, we hope to improve children's OSAH in function, three-dimensional shape and subjective and objective symptoms of sleep breathing through tonsillar adenoidectomy plus orthodontic treatment.
The aim of this longitudinal randomized investigation is to determine the long-term effects of early lateral crossbite correction with Quad-Helix appliance, during the deciduous dentition, on craniofacial structures and dental arches, compared to treatment started later, after the first permanent molars have erupted. The hypothesis is that the timing of treatment has significant effects on orthodontic treatment total time, the general outcome of the treatment, and the compliance of the patient. The Age cohort of five-year-old of children living in the community areas of Oulunsalo are screened at the age of 5 years for malocclusions. Of these children 80 children who meet the criteria are chosen for the study after the written consent. The children are randomized into two groups. In the first group the treatment with Quad-Helix appliance is started at the age of 5 to 6 years, before the eruption of the permanent molars. The device is cemented to the second deciduous molars. The treatment is continued and continued until normal lateral occlusion is achieved and the device is kept stable for one year after this. In the second group headgear treatment is started after the first permanent maxillary molars have erupted. The device is cemented to the first permanent molars. The treatment is continued until normal lateral occlusion is achieved and the device is kept stable for one year after this. In both groups dental casts, cephalograms, and standardized 3D facial photographs are taken before treatment (T0), after the first treatment phase (T1), after the second treatment phase (T2) and after the growth (T3). Facial 3D scanning is performed for all the subjects after the treatment to find out the effect of different treatment methods on facial characteristics. The dental casts are scanned to make 3D models of the cast to be used in detailed analysis. A wide multi-level questionnaire is performed before, during and after the study to the parents and the children to find out the comprehensive effects of orthodontic treatment on the well-being of the child. The questionnaire includes the Rutter's child behavioural pattern (Rutter et al., 2001). In both studies, all the guidelines of RCT are applied. Blinding of the clinicians is gained, as the orthodontists or dentists treating the children are not aware of the rationale of the study. Blinding is applied on all measurement of the documents.
This study will be conducted to see if unlocking mandible from deep bite in growing females by flat fixed anterior bite plane will change mandibular position in skeletal mandibular deficiency and if there is a difference in the change of mandibular position if we assisted the mandible by holding it in a more forward position by modified inclined fixed anterior bite plane .These results will be compared to normal mandibular growth from previous records of a matched control group in the discussion afterthat.
Fixed orthodontic appliances in combination with intraoral elastics are a common and effective method use in the orthodontic correction of malocclusions. However, their success is largely dependent on the patient's compliance. Failure to wear the elastics as instructed will reduce efficacy of treatment, ultimately increasing treatment time and potentially producing imperfect alignment of teeth. The hypothesis tested is that daily electronic reminders via a mobile application can significantly increase patient compliance, thus effectively improving treatment outcomes.
The aim of the study is to follow a group of preschool children from early permanent dentition to determine the prevalence and incidence of caries malocclusions and to investigated the related risk factors as age, gender, ethnic origin and non-nutritive sucking habits, breathing disturbances, allergies, Dietary habits, oral hygiene status and dental care.
Compare the impact of using rapid maxillary expanders on masticatory muscle activities (Masseter and Anterior Temporalis muscles) among different posterior cross-bite patient (unilateral, bilateral) as well as compare the cross-bite side and non-cross-bite sides of the same preadolescent unilateral crossbite patient before the expansion and after one month of the completion treatment period using surface electromyography device.
The purpose of this study is to provide evidence on the effectiveness, the efficiency and efficacy of Peizo-Corticission in accelerating orthodontic tooth movement and reducing orthodontic treatment time.
The purpose of this study is to determine if the Herbst appliance with indirect skeletal anchorage in mini-implants is capable of preventing excessive inclination of the lower incisors at the end of the treatment when compared to the Herbst appliance with dental anchorage and Twin-Block appliances in patients with Class II malocclusion and overjet ≥ 6 mm.
Technological advances have made computer aided orthodontic treatment planning possible. 3D dental scanners and software make it possible to design and approve the outcome before treatment begins. Manufacturers have provided different customized appliance systems that would help practitioners achieve those computer-designed outcomes. The purpose of this study is to determine the accuracy of computer-guided indirect bonding of orthodontic brackets at achieving the predicted alignment and comparing that to the accuracy of conventional orthodontic bracket placement at achieving a predetermined goal. The results of this study will help orthodontists and patients know if there is an advantage to using custom appliances. The study will be a prospective clinical study and will include a total of 60 arches from 30 patients enrolled at the Harvard School of Dental Medicine. 15 patients will be assigned to each of the two study groups (Motion View or control). Both groups will have a 3D intra-oral scan to measure the initial discrepancy and determine the computer-simulated design that the orthodontist believes is the optimized outcome. At the end of each patient's participation, a 3D intraoral scan will be taken and used to assess intra-arch leveling and alignment using ABO's objective grading system's criteria for alignment, marginal ridges and buccolingual inclination. Each arch will then be superimposed on the predicted outcome to determine how accurate each system was at achieving the planned movements in all 3 dimensions. We hypothesize that the accuracy of computer-guided indirect bonding (Motion View) at achieving the predicted outcomes will differ in comparison to the accuracy of conventional orthodontic bracket placement at achieving a predetermined goal.