Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3117111 | American Journal of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics | 2011 | 10 Pages |
IntroductionPalatal expansion can potentially affect alveolar bone and circummaxillary sutures. In this study, we characterized their mechanical strain during acute expansion.MethodsEight 3- and 6-month-old fresh pig heads received acute palatal expansion with hyrax expanders. Strain gauges were used to measure strain at the buccal alveolar bone of anchor and adjacent nonanchor teeth, and at maxillary-premaxillary, maxillary-zygomatic, and zygomatic-temporal sutures during expansion. Intermolar width changes were measured from dental casts.ResultsIntermolar width increased less than expander activation, and the midpalatal sutures were only opened slightly. Alveolar bone strain increased linearly with expander activation and decayed by 20% to 30% during postactivation intervals. Compressive strain at anchor-tooth alveolar bone locations was directed occlusally and apically, related to tooth tipping, and significantly higher than that at nonanchor tooth locations. With expander activation, suture strains increased monotonically and tended to plateau. Suture strain magnitude was generally similar to physiologic (masticatory) strains reported in the literature. The dominant strain polarity was compression at the maxillary-zygomatic and zygomatic-temporal sutures, but there was tension at the maxillary-premaxillary suture.ConclusionsIn these pigs, palatal expansion can cause significant occlusal-apical compression at buccal alveolar bone and physiologic-level strains at circummaxillary sutures.