Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
8697961 International Orthodontics 2018 13 Pages PDF
Abstract
Our sample including 107 subjects was composed of 77 female patients (71.3%) and 30 male patients (27.8%) 7 hypodivergent patients (6.5%), 56 hyperdivergent patients (52.3%) and 44 normodivergent patients (41.1%). Patients' mean age was 19.35 ± 5.95 years. The hypodivergent patients presented more pronounced curves of Spee compared to the normodivergent and the hyperdivergent populations; patients in skeletal Class I presented less pronounced curves of Spee compared to patients in skeletal Class II and Class III. These differences were non significant (P > 0.05). The curve of Spee was positively and moderately correlated with Angle's classification, overjet, overbite, sellion-articulare distance, and breathing type (P < 0.05). We found no correlation between age, gender and the other parameters included in the study with the curve of Spee (P > 0.05). Seventy five percent (75%) of the hyperdivergent patients with an oral breathing presented an overbite of 3 mm, which is quite excessive given the characteristics often admitted for this typology; this parameter could explain the overbite observed in the hyperdivergent population included in this study. For the multivariate analysis, the overbite and the sellion-articulare distance remained independently related to the curve of Spee according to the breathing type, Angle's classification, and overjet. This regression model explains 21.4% of the changes in the curve of Spee.
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Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Dentistry, Oral Surgery and Medicine
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