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Oral Rehabilitation (oral + rehabilitation)
Selected AbstractsOcclusion , time to reflect?JOURNAL OF ORAL REHABILITATION, Issue 6 2005A personal view summary, The topic of occlusion presents a conundrum to many practitioners. To some the topic is very complex and yet to others, although important, it illustrates how adaptive the dentition is to change. This commentary presents some arguments as to how the importance of occlusion and its understanding have evolved since the Journal of Oral Rehabilitation was first published. [source] Gingival Zenith Positions and Levels of the Maxillary Anterior DentitionJOURNAL OF ESTHETIC AND RESTORATIVE DENTISTRY, Issue 2 2009STEPHEN J. CHU DMD ABSTRACT Purpose:, The location of the gingival zenith in a medial-lateral position relative to the vertical tooth axis of the maxillary anterior teeth remains to be clearly defined. In addition, the apex of the free gingival margin of the lateral incisor teeth relative to the gingival zeniths of the adjacent proximal teeth remains undetermined. Therefore, this investigation evaluated two clinical parameters: (1) the gingival zenith position (GZP) from the vertical bisected midline (VBM) along the long axis of each individual maxillary anterior tooth; and (2) the gingival zenith level (GZL) of the lateral incisors in an apical-coronal direction relative to the gingival line joining the tangents of the GZP of the adjacent central incisor and canine teeth under healthy conditions. Materials and Methods:, A total of 240 sites in 20 healthy patients (13 females, 7 males) with an average age of 27.7 years were evaluated. The inclusion patient criteria were absence of periodontal disease, gingival recession, or gingival hypertrophy as well as teeth without loss of interdental papillae, spacing, crowding, existing restorations, and incisal attrition. GZP dimensions were measured with calibrated digital calipers for each individual tooth and within each tooth group in a medial-lateral direction from the VBM. GZLs were measured in an apical-coronal direction from a tangent line drawn on the diagnostic casts from the GZPs of the adjacent teeth. Results:, This study demonstrated that all central incisors displayed a distal GZP from the VBM, with a mean average of 1 mm. Lateral incisors showed a deviation of the gingival zenith by a mean of 0.4 mm. In 97.5% of the canine population, the GZP was centralized along the long axis of the canine. The mean distance of the contour of the gingival margin in an apical-coronal direction of the lateral incisors (GZL) relative to gingival line joining the tangent of the adjacent central and canine GZPs was approximately 1 mm. Conclusion:, This investigation revealed a GZP mean value of 1 mm distal from the VBM for the central incisor tooth group. The lateral incisors showed a mean average of 0.4 mm. Thecanine tooth group demonstrated almost no deviations of the GZP from the VBM. The GZL of the lateral incisors relative to the adjacent central incisor and canine teeth were more coronal by approximately 1 mm. These data could be used as reference points during esthetic anterior oral rehabilitation. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE The information presented in this article can be clinically applied to reestablish the proper intratooth GZPs of the maxillary anterior teeth during periodontal crown lengthening or root coverage procedures. In addition, the intra-arch gingival level of the lateral incisor gingival zenith relative to the adjacent central and canine teeth can be appropriately established. [source] Concurrence Between the Maxillary Midline and Bisector to the Interpupillary LineJOURNAL OF ESTHETIC AND RESTORATIVE DENTISTRY, Issue 1 2009EVANIA ESKELSEN DDS ABSTRACT Purpose:, Symmetry is one of the factors that contributes to facial harmony, and in oral rehabilitation it determines the success of esthetic treatment. Therefore, the aim of the present study was to analyze the axial symmetry between the bipupillar midline and maxillary central incisors midline of 102 dental students (both genders) distributed across five Brazilian dental schools. Materials and Methods:, Students with no teeth missing and who had never been subjected to any dental treatment were selected. Photographs were taken with a Dental Eye III camera with a 100-mm macro objective and ratio of 1 : 10 from natural size, recorded on an Ektachrome ASA/ISO 100 film. The images were developed and applied to Microsoft Office Power Point 2007 software. The results were analyzed by analysis of variance and Student's t -test (, = 0.05). Results:, There was no significant correlation between bipupillar midline and the maxillary dental midline, irrespective of gender. Conclusion:, No significant coincidence was observed between the interpupillary and dental midline. However, the interpupillar distance and its relationship with other anatomic structures may be used as a reference in treatment, but measurements must be assessed individually. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE Anatomic measurements and facial proportions can be helpful during the planning of esthetic oral rehabilitation. [source] Treatment with removable partial dentures: a longitudinal study.JOURNAL OF ORAL REHABILITATION, Issue 5 2003Part II summary The aim of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of an oral rehabilitation by removable partial denture (RPD). Between 1983 and 1994, 629 patients were provided with an RPD at the Dental School of the Université catholique de Louvain. All the RPDs were constructed with a cobalt,chromium framework. All the treatments were provided by dental students under the supervision of clinical instructors. At recall time (1998,2000), 269 patients could not be reached neither by telephone nor by mail and 27 had died. Consequently, 333 patients were called for clinical examination and 254 of these (76·3%) actually attended. For a total of 292 RPDs checked 1893 persistent teeth were listed, with 804 serving as abutments; more than half (57·6%) of these were crowned, for which 51 debondings were recorded. For the period of observation we listed 79 abutments lost (37 at the upper jaw and 42 at the lower jaw), i.e. 9·8% of the total number of abutments. No relation could be established between the type of the abutments (natural or crowned teeth) and the losses observed (Test of Mantel-Haenszel: P=0·9496). In the upper jaw, the percentage of abutments lost was significantly higher in the presence of free-end edentulous areas as compared with bounded edentulous areas (Test of Mantel-Haenszel: P=0·0002); this difference does not appear for the lower jaws (P=0·9558). If we deduct the 25 abutments related with the 11 non-worn RPDs and the 79 abutments lost, no change becomes apparent for 92·2% of the maxillary abutments and for 85·8% of the mandibular abutments. For the 1089 other teeth, we observed the loss of 40 teeth and the appearance of caries or new fillings for 95 teeth. The fractures of cast clasps represent 3·4%. [source] Prosthetic treatment need in a representative German sample*JOURNAL OF ORAL REHABILITATION, Issue 8 2001M. H. Walter Regarding declining resources epidemiological data on needs for oral rehabilitation are required. Within the framework of an oral health survey a non-stratified two-stage random sample was taken to represent the over 14-year-old population of Saxony/Germany. The participation rate was 55%. Normative need was determined by dental assessment and guidelines developed in a consensus process, subjective prosthetic treatment need by self-complete questionnaire. About 97% of the realized sample could be planned within the guidelines. About 81% had normative prosthetic treatment need. Compared with the rate of normative need the rate of subjective need (13%) was considerably lower (,2P < 0,01). Different predictive parameters of subjective need were identified by logistic regression. Besides other factors subjective need was associated with giving dentist's recommendation as significant reason for prosthetic restorations [odds ratio (OR)=5,43], not believing that the own teeth were all right (OR=0,17), and the existence of prosthetic restorations (OR=3,87 for fixed restorations; OR=4,05 for removable dentures). The guidelines proved their suitability to assess normative prosthetic treatment need in oral health surveys. Further research is necessary to find adequate options for including patients' preferences in an adequate need definition. [source] Three-dimensional finite element analysis of the facial skeleton on simulated occlusal loadingJOURNAL OF ORAL REHABILITATION, Issue 7 2001Martin D. Gross Development of predictive models of occlusal loading of the facial skeleton will be of value for prosthetic design in oral rehabilitation. A 3-D finite element (FE) model of a human skull, based on CT scans, was constructed to analyse strain and stress distribution in the facial skeleton caused by simulated occlusal loading. Vertical loads were applied simulating loading of the full maxillary arch and unilateral single point occlusal loading of maxillary molar, pre-molar, canine and incisor sites. Strain and stress regimes from Von Mises (VM) failure criteria and extension and compression diagrams showed even distribution of strain following loading of the full maxillary arch throughout the facial elements. For individual points, the highest VM concentrations were consistently located on the facial aspect several mm above the loading site. Strain trajectories divided into a ,V-shaped' pattern, from the loading point into medial and lateral branches with higher VM values in the medial. As the same load was applied from the posterior to anterior region, VM values increased on all facial areas. Strain patterns were less symmetric and there was an increase in strain in the alveolar arch and around the rim of the nasal cavity. The overall picture of the facial skeleton is of a vertical plate enabling it to withstand occlusal stresses by in-plane loading and bending in its own plane. The most efficient distribution of load was on maxillary full arch loading with the most unfavourable strain concentrations occurring on loading in the anterior region. [source] Early Functional Loading of Brånemark Dental Implants: 5-Year Clinical Follow-up StudyCLINICAL IMPLANT DENTISTRY AND RELATED RESEARCH, Issue 2 2000Ingvar Ericsson DDS ABSTRACT Background: Short-term clinical studies have indicated the possibility of one-stage surgery and early loading of machined titanium implants. However, long-term data comparing the outcome to the conventional two-stage technique are missing. Purpose: A clinical and radiographic study was performed to compare the outcome of oral rehabilitation of the endentulous mandible by fixed suprastructures connected to implants installed according to either (1) a one-stage surgical procedure and early loading (experimental group - EG) or (2) the original two-stage concept (reference group - RG). The EG and RG comprised 16 and 11 subjects, respectively. Materials and Methods: The following specific inclusion criterion were adopted: (1) all patients had to consider themselves to be in good general health, (2) the amount of bone had to enable the installation of five to six, at least 10-mm long fixtures (Mk II fixtures; Nobel Biocare AB, Göteborg, Sweden) between the mental foramina, and (3) the patients had to be available for the follow-up and maintenance program. A total of 88 implants were placed in the EG compared to 30 in the RG. In the EG, fixed appliances were connected to the implants within 20 days following implant installation while the fixed appliances in the RG were connected about 4 months following fixture installation. At delivery of the suprastructures, all patients were radiographically examined, an examination that was repeated at the 18- and 60-month follow-ups. Results: The analysis of the radiographs from the EG disclosed that during the observation period, between 18 and 60 months, the mean loss of bone support amounted to 0.2 mm (SD = 0.4). The corresponding value observed in the RG was 0.0 mm (SD = 0.5). During the 60-month observation period, no fixture was lost in any of the two groups examined. The implants under study as well as those in the reference material were at all observation intervals found to be clinically stable. Conclusions: This clinical study demonstrated that it is, at least based on a 5-year observation period, possible to successfully load via a permanent fixed rigid cross-arch suprastructure titanium dental implants soon after installation. However, such a treatment approach has to be strictly limited to the interforamina area of the endentulous mandible. Furthermore, the bone resorption was found to be within the same range around such implants as around implants installed and loaded according to the original two-stage protocal. [source] Oral myofunctional and vocal characteristics in subjects subjected to oral rehabilitation with osseointegrated implantsCLINICAL ORAL IMPLANTS RESEARCH, Issue 3 2006Karilla Matteo Sansone Abstract Purpose: The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of oral rehabilitation using immediately loaded fixed implant-supported mandibular prostheses, considering chewing, swallowing, speech and voice aspects. Material and methods: Fourteen patients subjected to this treatment were evaluated by a clinical examination of the stomatognathic system and perceptual evaluation of voice quality before oral rehabilitation, as well as after 1 and 4 months. Results: After oral rehabilitation, the results showed that there were no significant modifications in the aspects investigated. Conclusion: Thus, implant-supported prosthetic rehabilitation, despite providing a more satisfactory occlusal standard, did not yield changes in the functional patterns of individuals in this study. [source] |