Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3115861 American Journal of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics 2015 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Guidance of the canine during normal eruption alters incisor axial orientation.•Canine eruption direction and progress are influenced by environmental factors.•Right and left variations in a patient cannot show different genetic features.

This article is a review that enumerates the causes of impaction of the maxillary permanent canines, including hard tissue obstructions, soft tissue lesions, and anomalies of neighboring teeth, and discusses the much-argued relationship between environmental and genetic factors. These phenomena have been shown in many investigations to accompany the diagnosis of canine impaction and have been presented as unrelated anomalous features, each of which is etiologically construed as genetic, including the aberrant canine itself. While in general the influence of genetics pervades the wider picture, a guidance theory proposes an alternative etiologic line of reasoning and interpretation of these studies, in which the same genetically determined anomalous features provide an abnormal milieu in which the canine is reared and from which it is guided in its misdirected and often abortive path of eruption.

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