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The Introduction of a new lateral cephalometric method and its potential application in open bite deformities

Thesis (PhD(Dentistry))--University of Limpopo (Medunsa Campus), 2010 / Open bite deformity is a dentofacial anomaly characterised by a space
between the upper and lower teeth when the jaws are brought together.
When the posterior teeth are in contact and there is separation between the
upper and lower incisal edges, the condition is referred to as an anterior open
bite (AOB). Anterior open bite occurs more commonly among the Black
African race groups, and unless recognised and intercepted early in life,
treatment of the condition can become complicated, extended and expensive.
Some of the aetiological factors cited in the development of the condition
include, an unfavourable growth pattern, finger sucking habits, enlarged
tonsillar lymphoid tissue, abnormal tongue and orofacial muscular activity
and hereditary factors.
Morphologically AOB can involve only the dentoalveolar regions of the
craniofacial anatomy, in which case the AOB is said to be a dental AOB; it
may be the result of a disproportion between the jaws and is then referred to
as a skeletal AOB, or it may be a mixture of the two. The aetiology and
structural components of AOB would largely determine the mode of
treatment, which can be orthodontic treatment, orthognathic surgery or a
combination of the two.
Previous studies into the prevalence of AOB in South Africa have reported it
to be as high as 27%. Since a major percentage of the patients seen at the
School of Dentistry of the University of Limpopo are of the South African
Black race group it became relevant to investigate the prevalence of AOB at
this institution and to develop a fresh assessment method with standardised
values for this population sample.
A retrospective study was therefore undertaken among patients visiting the
School of Dentistry of the University of Limpopo to determine the
prevalence of AOB over a 15-year time period from 1992 to 2006. All
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patients with an AOB were documented with regard to age, gender, severity
and aetiology. The criteria for determining open bite was a measure of at
least 1 mm vertical separation between the incisal edges of the upper and
lower incisors when the posterior teeth are in occlusion, as determined from
the lateral cephalograms and confirmed by the study models.
A review of the literature pertaining to craniofacial growth, the aetiology,
pathogenesis, clinical presentation and treatment of AOB is also presented as
well as investigative techniques for the assessment of AOB. A revised lateral
cephalometric assessment method proposed as the Dawjee Analysis was
designed and developed and is introduced. It consists of 12 measurements of
which nine have never been previously mentioned in the literature and are
being defined and described for the first time in this proposed analysis.
These parameters are measured against existing and tested anatomical
landmarks and planes, combined with the introduction of one new landmark
and seven new measuring planes that have not been cited or described in
other established analyses. These landmarks, planes and measurement
parameters of the analysis are presented and its utility is described. A case
study of a patient with AOB is included with an assessment of pre-treatment
and post-treatment changes using this analysis.
In order to establish standardised values for this population sample, the
proposed Dawjee analysis was applied to a control group consisting of 50
adult male and 50 adult female subjects whose cephalometric analysis
conformed to the standardised values for this race group.
The analysis was also applied to an AOB sample from the retrospective
study consisting of 46 male and 59 female cephalograms. Based on the
amount of incisor separation this group was divided into mild, moderate and
severe AOB. All subjects in both the AOB and control samples were in their
permanent dentition stage, having their first permanent molars in a Class I
relation.
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In testing the validity of the proposed Dawjee Analysis, 20 cephalograms
from the control group and 20 from the AOB group were also evaluated
using other established cephalometric methods and the results thereof were
compared to the findings of the proposed Dawjee Analysis
From the 15-year retrospective investigation this study found the prevalence
of AOB to be 9.67% with the male to female ratio of 46:54. The condition
appears to be more common before the age of 13 years than after 13 years
with a ratio of 68:32. The aetiology of the AOB in order of rank was found
to be thumb or finger sucking, hereditary, nasal obstruction and unknown
causes. Over the 15-year period the number of AOB patients attending the
Orthodontic Department, School of Dentistry of the University of Limpopo,
decreased from 16% to 8%. While this could be due to the realization that
the principal cause (thumb or finger sucking) carries a social stigma, a
concerted effort must be made to educate communities so that this
detrimental habit can be minimised and eradicated.
Standardised values for the proposed Dawjee Analysis are presented and
potential flaws are outlined. When comparisons are drawn between the
control and AOB group it was found that the latter differs from the control
sample in 8 of the 12 of the parameters, namely:
1. Incisor separation
2. Anterior cranial base inclination
3. Posterior maxillary position
4. Posterior mandibular position
5. Interalveolar angle
6. Point B position
7. Apex of the maxillary triangle
8. Apex of the mandibular triangle
The null hypothesis, which states there are no difference in the
cephalometric values of the proposed Dawjee Analysis between AOB
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subjects and a control group for this population sample, was therefore
rejected.
These morphological differences were supported by the findings of other
established analysis that were tested on the AOB and control groups. The
difference of the proposed Dawjee Analysis from other cephalometric
methods lies in its capability to identify and separate the skeletal from the
dental components of an AOB for this study sample.
Diagnosis involves a comparison to population standards and the aim of
cephalometrics is to describe the standardised morphology of a population.
To this end standardised values for the proposed Dawjee Analysis in a South
African Black population sample have been determined which focuses on
identifying the morphological basis of an AOB.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:ul/oai:ulspace.ul.ac.za:10386/257
Date29 May 2010
CreatorsMohamed, Dawjee Salahuddien
ContributorsOberholzer, Theuns G
PublisherUniversity of Limpopo (Medunsa Campus)
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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