muscle strength in orthodontic diagnosis

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Slideshare Muscle strength and orthodontic treatment philosophy

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Page 1: Muscle Strength in Orthodontic Diagnosis

Slideshare

Muscle strength and orthodontic treatment philosophy

Page 2: Muscle Strength in Orthodontic Diagnosis

Implications

The same brackets, bands, wires, and mechanics may cause different treatment responses in different patients

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Remember

The worst mistake in orthodontic treatment is …

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cause excessive bite opening

in a patient who already has

an open bite.

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Two general categories of growth rotation

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Descriptive terms summary

• Forward growth direction

• Horizontal grower

• Counter-clockwise grower

• Strong muscled patient

• Downward growth direction

• Vertical grower

• Clockwise grower

• Weak muscled patient

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Every decision you make during ortho-

dontic treatment will be influenced by

the patient’s growth pattern and/or

muscle strength

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Historical Perspective

• Sassouni, McNamara, Tweed, and especially Bjork

• The work of these doctors helps us shape a treatment philosophy

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Sassouni, 1960

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McNamara, 1990

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What do these studies tell us?

• The most unattractive facial profiles are long face profiles

• Most Class II malocclusions are vertically normal or excessive

• Therefore, control in the vertical dimension is vitally important in orthodontic treatment

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Importance of Vertical Control

• Recognized by Professor Arne Bjork

– 1951-1965 – Chairman of the orthodontic department at the Royal College of Dentistry in Copenhagen, Denmark

– Authored a study in which he superimposed cephalometric x-rays on upper and lower metallic implants placed in 248 untreated, growing children

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Bjork’s study

• No treatment performed

• Records taken yearly

• Implants provide a reliable method of superimposition

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Importance of this study

• Can never be duplicated due to ethical concerns

– Not treating malocclusions in a timely manner is now unethical

– Placing implants in children for observation only is now unethical

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Results

• Condyle seems to be the driving force behind craniofacial development

• Condylar growth direction depends on the location of the growth cells on the head of the condyle

– This is an inherited trait

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Cellular proliferation

• If it occurs on the anterior surface of the head of the condyle:

– Mandible will rotate in a forward (counter-clockwise) direction

Chin moves forward

with growth

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Cellular proliferation, continued

• If it occurs on the posterior surface of the head of the condyle:

– Mandible will rotate in a backward (clockwise) direction

Chin moves down with

growth

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Anterior Posterior

• Forward rotator

• Counter-clockwise rotator

• Horizontal growth pattern

• Hypodivergent facial pattern

• STRONG MUSCLED PATIENT

• Backward rotator

• Clockwise rotator

• Vertical growth pattern

• Hyperdivergent facial pattern

• WEAK MUSCLED PATIENT

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Facts about muscle strength

• 85% of the population are predominately strong muscled

• Occlusal force can be 6 times more powerful in strong muscled patients than in weak muscled patients

– Bite opening is more easily induced in weak muscled patients

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Location of growth cells

• Can be anywhere on the condylar head

• Most patients have both forward and backward rotation characteristics– The most difficult ortho cases

are extreme forward and especially extreme backward rotators

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Implications of Bjork’s study

• Muscles of mastication exert pressure and tension on different areas of the mandible depending on condylar growth direction

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Implications, continued

• Resorption and apposition of bone, and therefore the morphology of the mandible, differs depending on condylar growth direction

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Conclusion

• Growth direction can be predicted based on mandibular morphology

– This is a very valuable diagnostic tool

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How does this affect treatment?

• Most orthodontic mechanics are extrusive

• Molar extrusion exceeding the amount associated with normal growth can lead to excessive backward mandibular rotation

– This is to be avoided because long faces are very undesirable from an esthetic standpoint

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Treatment, continued

• Strong muscled patients usually easily resist the extrusive components of mechanics

• Weak muscled patients are often susceptible to the extrusive mechanics

– Since weak muscled patients are already long faced patients, this extrusion can be very harmful

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Rules to ALWAYS Remember

• The same brackets, bands, wires, and mechanics system will produce different treatment responses in different patients

– Muscle strength often determines these responses

• The worst mistake in orthodontic treatment is to cause over-eruption of molars in a weak muscled patient

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Review: facts about molar extrusion

• Mechanics produce extrusive forces

• Eruption is expressed more in weak muscled patients because masticatory muscles do not prevent it

• Excessive molar extrusion leads to backward mandibular rotation

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Summary of Growth Mechanics

Vertical grower- note downward

growth direction.

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Summary, Continued

Horizontal grower- note forward growth

direction.

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Strong (l) and weak (r)muscled mandibular shape

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Strong (l) and weak (r) muscled patients

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Important Points

• Not all patients exhibit pure horizontal or vertical growth.

• The direction of eruption differs in the growth patterns.

– Horizontal pattern- deep bite plus mesial eruption can lead to lower arch crowding

– Vertical pattern- vertical eruption leads to no arch length increase with growth

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To increase success rate

• Refer weak muscled patients

• When treating weak muscled patients, use mechanics that limit molar extrusion

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Tweed foundation

• Compared successful and unsuccessful cases

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Successful cases

Note forward mandibular rotation

and lack of molar eruption

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Unsuccessful cases

Note backward mandibular rotation

and molar eruption

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Tweed Results

• Successful cases– Minimal backward

rotation

• Unsuccessful cases– Extreme backward

rotation

• 1mm of molar eruption can lead to 3mm of backward rotation

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So…

• Control of excess molar eruption and the resulting backward mandibular rotation is one of the major goals of orthodontic therapy

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Evaluate this case

Pretreatment- 3mm Class II

note gingival display

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Post treatment

Occlusion is Class I- treatment completed with Class II elastics

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Successful or unsuccessful?

Note molar eruption and man-

dibular rotation.

What caused this?

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Facial photos

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Evaluation

• Poor vertical control

• Vertical component of

Class II elastics was expressed

• What could have been

done to prevent this?

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Mandibular morphological differences between strong and weak muscled

patients

Qualitative evaluation

Many patients have both strong and weak muscled characteristics

The main goal is to identify the extremes

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Gonial angle (Angle of the mandible)

• The angle formed by the intersection of a line tangent to the posterior border of the ramus and the mandibular plane. It determines inclination of the ramus to the mandibular plane. It indicates mandibular growth direction.

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Gonial Angle

128º ± 7º

Influences Relative Length Influences Growth Rotation

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Gonial angle

The more acute this angle is, the stronger is the patient’s

musculature

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Shape of lower border of the mandible

Strong muscled-double curve Weak muscled- concave

lower border

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Symphyseal inclination

The more acute the indicated angle, the stronger is the

patient’s musculature

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Symphyseal radiolucency

The more radiopaque the indicated area, the stronger is the

patient’s musculature

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Condylar inclination

Strong muscled- condyle points

forward

Weak muscled- condyle points

backward

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#6 Which has stronger muscles?

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#7 Which is stronger?

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#8 Which is stronger?

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Intramatrix rotation

• Maxillary and mandibular teeth and alveolar processes

• This rotates in conjunction with, but independent of, the maxilla and mandible

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Fulcrum

• The most anterior portion of the dentition where contact occurs

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Type 1 intramatrix rotation

• Strong muscled patients

• Fulcrum at the incisal edges

• Results in normal downward and forward growth

– Best possible development

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Type 1 Intramatrix

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Example of type 1 rotation

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Type 2 intramatrix rotation

• Strong muscled patients

• Fulcrum in the middle of the arch

• Super-eruption of anteriors leads to dental deep bite

– Class II, div. II characteristics

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Type 2 Intramatrix

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Why does the fulcrum shift?

• Allergies

• Airway problems

• Tongue, lip, and/or finger habits

• Early loss of primary teeth

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Example of Type 2 rotation

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Question

• A 10 year old patient comes into your office. She presents with a Class II malocclusion with a Type 2 intramatrix rotation. She has mandibular retrognathism and a deep bite. From an orthodontic perspective,

– What does she need?

– What appliance will help her meet her needs?

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Type 3 intramatrix rotation

• Weak muscled patients

• Fulcrum on the posterior teeth

• Two possible outcomes

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Normal anterior eruption

• Long face

• Good occlusion

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Type 3 Intramatrix

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Interruption of anterior eruption

• Skeletal open bite

• Dental open bite

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Causes of anterior interruption

• Tongue thrust

• Lip habits

• Thumb, finger habits

• Abnormal swallowing pattern

• Mouth breathing

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Why is treatment response different?

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Determine jaw and intramatrix rotation

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Muscle strength?

Intramatrix type?

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Muscle strength?

Intramatrix rotation?

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Describe the muscle strength

and intramatrix rotation.

Devise a treatment plan. What

additional information do you

need to complete the treatment

plan?

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Concepts in facial development

• All faces flatten as they mature

• The mechanics of flattening differ in forward and backward rotators

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Strong muscled patients

• Chin grows upward and forward

• Facial musculature “holds teeth back”

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Non-extraction treatment, age 9 (l) and age 17 (r)

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Weak muscled patients

• Chin grows down and back

• Retrusive pogonion leads to a flat face

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Photos were taken 7 years apart