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THE QUANTIFICATION OF FORCE DISTRIBUTION OF A VIBRATIONAL DEVICE FOR ACCELERATING TOOTH MOVEMENT

One of the most common concern among patients who need orthodontic treatment
is treatment duration. The ability to accelerate orthodontic tooth movements would
be beneficial to reduce the undesired side-effects of prolonged treatment. Methods
have been used in conjugate with common orthodontic appliances to shorten the
treatment. One of them is to use vibrational force (VF), which is non-invasive. The
VF stimulates bone modeling and remodeling, which is essential to tooth movement.
However, commercial devices used in the clinic failed to deliver consistent outcomes.
The effects of the VF highly depend on its intensity the tooth receives. There must be
a range of stimulation that optimizes the effects. The stimulation outside the range
either have no effects or creates damages, which adversely affects the orthodontic
treatment. Since these devices have generic mouthpiece and teeth are in different
heights, hence some teeth cannot get force stimulation and others may be overloaded.
The current designs also do not have ability to adjust the level of VF intensity that
individual tooth needs, as in some cases orthodontists are required to move a tooth
faster than others or even slower, which needs the device to be personalized. Therefore, the primary cause of inconsistent clinical outcomes is the inadequate design of
the mouthpiece of the current device. The goal of this study is to design a better
vibratory device that not only guarantees VF delivery but also enables orthodontists
to control the level of VF on the individual tooth, which meets the patient’s treatment needs. This is a preliminary study to understand the effects of different design
parameters affecting the VF distribution on teeth. A finite element model, which
consists of human upper and lower jaws in their occlusal positions and a mouthpiece,
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was created. The VF was from a vibratory source with a peak load of 0.3N and
specified frequencies (30 and 120 Hz). The element size was determined through a
convergence test and the model was validated experimentally. Results showed that
the VF distribution among the teeth relies on the material property of the mouthpiece. The distribution is uneven, meaning some teeth bearing much more load than
others. This means, with the current device design, teeth

  1. 10.25394/pgs.9118865.v1
Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:purdue.edu/oai:figshare.com:article/9118865
Date16 December 2020
Creatorsamin akbari (7047659)
Source SetsPurdue University
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeText, Thesis
RightsCC BY 4.0
Relationhttps://figshare.com/articles/thesis/THE_QUANTIFICATION_OF_FORCE_DISTRIBUTION_OF_A_VIBRATIONAL_DEVICE_FOR_ACCELERATING_TOOTH_MOVEMENT/9118865

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