Presurgical orthodontic decompensation with clear aligners

Orthodontists, surgeons, and patients have taken an interest in using clear aligners in combination with orthognathic surgery. This study aimed to evaluate the accuracy of tooth movements with clear aligners during presurgical orthodontics using novel 3-dimensional superimposition techniques. The st...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of orthodontics and dentofacial orthopedics 2022-10, Vol.162 (4), p.538-553
Hauptverfasser: Cong, Amalia, Ruellas, Antonio Carlos de Oliveira, Tai, Sandra Khong, Loh, Charlene Tai, Barkley, Mary, Yatabe, Marilia, Caminiti, Marco, Massaro, Camila, Bianchi, Jonas, Deleat-Besson, Romain, Le, Celia, Prieto, Juan Carlos, Al Turkestani, Najla N., Cevidanes, Lucia
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Orthodontists, surgeons, and patients have taken an interest in using clear aligners in combination with orthognathic surgery. This study aimed to evaluate the accuracy of tooth movements with clear aligners during presurgical orthodontics using novel 3-dimensional superimposition techniques. The study sample consisted of 20 patients who have completed presurgical orthodontics using Invisalign clear aligners. Initial (pretreatment) digital dental models, presurgical digital dental models, and ClinCheck prediction models were obtained. Presurgical models were superimposed onto initial ones using stable anatomic landmarks; ClinCheck models were superimposed onto presurgical models using surface best-fit superimposition. Five hundred forty-five teeth were measured for 3 angular movements (buccolingual torque, mesiodistal tip, and rotation) and 4 linear movements (buccolingual, mesiodistal, vertical, and total scalar displacement). The predicted tooth movement was compared with the achieved amount for each movement and tooth, using both percentage accuracy and numerical difference. Average percentage accuracy (63.4% ± 11.5%) was higher than in previously reported literature. The most accurate tooth movements were buccal torque and mesial displacement compared with lingual torque and distal displacement, particularly for mandibular posterior teeth. Clinically significant inaccuracies were found for the buccal displacement of maxillary second molars, lingual displacement of all molars, intrusion of mandibular second molars, the distal tip of molars, second premolars, and mandibular first premolars, buccal torque of maxillary central and lateral incisors, and lingual torque of premolars and molars. Superimposition techniques used in this study lay the groundwork for future studies to analyze advanced clear aligner patients. Invisalign is a treatment modality that can be considered for presurgical orthodontics—tooth movements involved in arch leveling and decompensation are highly accurate when comparing the simulated and the clinically achieved movements. •Superimpositions assess clear aligner patients with marked tooth movement-premolar extraction.•Dental decompensation and leveling with clear aligners have relatively high accuracy.•This study found higher average and range of percentage accuracy than previous studies.
ISSN:0889-5406
1097-6752
1097-6752
DOI:10.1016/j.ajodo.2021.12.019