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Active clinical trials for "Malocclusion"

Results 11-20 of 316

Bone Anchored Carriere Motion Appliance

MalocclusionAngle Class II

Carriere Motion appliance (CMA) was designed to change a Class II molar relationship into a Class I relationship by distalizing the whole posterior maxillary segment by means of class II elastics and mandibular anchorage. To eliminate the adverse effects of CMA with class II elastics, we can use the CMA to distalize the maxillary posterior segment with intra-arch anchorage using infrazygomatic miniscrews. The aim of this study is to evaluate skeletaly anchored CMA for distalization of the maxillary buccal segment vs. conventionally anchored CMA by comparing skeletal and dental measurements obtained from lateral cephalometric radiographs obtained prior to treatment (T0) and immediately after correction of class II and remval of the appliance (T1).

Recruiting7 enrollment criteria

Effect of Personality Traits on Reporting Outcomes of Orthodontic Treatment

Malocclusion

The study will monitor changes induced by orthodontic treatment and in the retention period, two years after the end of orthodontic treatment. The alignment of teeth, hygiene and gingiva will be assessed. Efficiency of two types of fixed appliances in active phase will be compared - esthetic and metal. Efficiency of two types of retention appliances in retention phase will be compared - fixed and removable. The benefits of orthodontic treatment to be studied are aesthetic concerns, dental self-confidence, self-esteem, social contacts, psychological influences, and chewing limitation. The stability of personality traits, body image and perfectionism will also be analyzed, as well as the extent to which these dimensions modify the reporting of psychosocial effects of malocclusion treatment.

Recruiting2 enrollment criteria

Comparing of the Clinical Outcome of Periodontal Accelerated Osteogenic Orthodontics With Horizontal...

Malocclusion

The study aims to compare the effect of periodontal accelerated osteogenic orthodontics (PAOO) with horizontal or vertical releasing incisions on operation time, healing, adverse effects, and effectiveness of bone augmentation. Methods: A total of 22 patients requiring PAOO surgery due to orthodontic treatment were enrolled in this trial, and randomly divided into test or control group, consisting of 11 subjects in each. The test group will receive PAOO with horizontal extending incisions on both sides of the flap; while the control group will receive PAOO with vertical releasing incisions; the two groups use the same surgical technic except for the incision design. Outcome measures include: operation time, postoperative scar, radiographic data (alveolar height and alveolar ridge thickness), gingival thickness, etc. Clinical evaluation will be performed at 1 week, 2 weeks, 3months, 6 months and 12 months after operation.

Recruiting11 enrollment criteria

Evaluation of Geistlich Fibro-Gide ® and Autogenous Connective Tissue Graft Prior to Orthodontic...

Thin GingivaTransverse Maxillary Deficiency1 more

Teenage children and adults often undergo orthodontic treatment each year to improve their dental esthetics and chewing function. One common problem they present with is having a small maxilla compared to the mandible. The standard of treatment to correct this issue is to expand the maxilla using either a tooth-anchored expander, a bone-anchored expander, or braces. Unfortunately, these treatment options can sometimes result in a loss of gum tissue and supporting structures of the teeth. Certain patients, especially ones that have thin gum tissue, are at a higher risk of this gum tissue loss. Orthodontic treatment for these patients will expand their jaw, causing further pressure on already thin gums. An increasingly common treatment to prevent this is to proactively modify patient's thin tissue surgically prior to their orthodontic treatment so they can withstand the tooth movement. The gold standard of doing this surgical intervention consists of harvesting a connective tissue from the palate which is not well tolerated by the younger population. Our study will evaluate the use of a biomaterial substitute instead of harvesting the patient's own tissue to thicken the gingival tissues. Surgical healing, patient satisfaction, pain index, as well as tissue contour post orthodontic treatment will be assessed thoroughly. This study will help us understand: 1) if biomaterials can be a substitute for traditional autogenous gum grafts to help thicken the patient's gum tissue prior to orthodontic treatment, and 2) if they are able to withstand the pressure of orthodontic movement. This will be the first long-term study of this kind.

Recruiting11 enrollment criteria

Prefabricated Versus 3D-Printing Myofunctional Appliances

Class II Division 1 Malocclusion

The aim of this clinical study is to evaluate the dentoskeletal effects of Class II division 1 treatment in growing patients with a prefabricated myofunctional appliance versus a 3D-printing myofunctional appliance.

Recruiting4 enrollment criteria

Retention With Three Different Bonded Retainers a Multicenter, Randomized Controlled Trial With...

Dental MalocclusionStability

One of major challenges in orthodontics is to inhibit relapse and ensure stability of treatment outcomes. Retention is the phase of orthodontic treatment that attempts to keep teeth in the corrected position after correction with orthodontic braces. Without retention there is a tendency for the teeth to return to their initial position (1). Retention is usually necessary to overcome the elastic recoil of the periodontal supporting fibers and to allow remodeling of the alveolar bone. The bonded orthodontic lingual retainer constructed from composite and orthodontic wires provides an esthetic and efficient system for maintained retention and has been shown to be an effective means of retaining aligned anterior teeth in the post treatment position in the long term. This has been in popular use as a method of retention since the late 1970s (2). The traditional retainers, which are still in use, are multi-strand stainless steel retainers such as Penta-one® 0.0215 (Masel Orthodontics, Carlsbad, CA, USA). The main problem with multistrand stainless steel retainers is their high rate of failure. Clinical studies indicate that 5% to 37% of mandibular retainers fail during retention in some form, either bond failure or wire breakage (3-5). Reliance Orthodontic Products, Inc. (Itasca, IL, USA) recently introduced a bonded retainer system (Ortho-Flextech™ chain). This retainer's bonding is claimed to be quick and easy by reducing chairside time and eliminating laboratory costs (6). One other recently introduced retainer is Memotain™ (CA-Digital in Mettmann, Germany). Memotain is a CAD/CAM fabricated lingual retainer made of 0.014 X 0.014-inch rectangular nickel-titanium. The wire is highly flexible and custom cut to precisely adapt to the patient's lingual tooth anatomy. According to manufacturer, Memotain offers numerous perceived advantages to traditional multistranded lingual wires, including no need for wire measuring or bending, individually optimized placement, greater accuracy of fit, tighter interproximal adaptation, less tongue irritation, better durability, and resistance to microbial colonization (6). However, randomized clinical trials are necessary to determine whether these advantages are substantiated with scientific data. A recent review by the Cochrane group concluded that to date there is insufficient evidence to single out any particular retention strategy as the preferred method: it was recommended that future studies should include true randomization, reporting of dropouts, adequate sample size calculation, and a minimum follow-up period of 3 months (8). Thus, the aims of this multicenter, randomised controlled trial are: To compare and evaluate the effectiveness and failure rate of Penta-one multistrand, Ortho-Flextech and Memotain retainers with each other To compare the possible complications between the three retainers over time To establish the cost-effectiveness of the three retainers To evaluate the effectiveness of sandblasting in the retention of the wires

Recruiting4 enrollment criteria

Early Orthodontic Treatment of Dental Crowding

Dental Crowding

Aim of the study is to compare treatment duration and effects of orthodontic treatment of dental crowding between treatments started at different stages of mixed dentition phase. The randomized controlled trial study will be conducted in a public health care center.

Recruiting8 enrollment criteria

Canine Retraction Using Different Bracket Slots' Sizes

Treating Class II Malocclusion and Bimaxillary Proclination

Primary Objective Evaluating the effectiveness of canine retraction in terms of: rate of movement and rotation using 0.020-inch slot and dual-slot systems in comparison with the 0.022-inch slot system. Secondary Objectives Measuring the amount of molar anchorage loss during canine retraction between the different bracket slot appliances. Evaluation of alignment efficiency using different bracket slot appliances. Null Hypothesis There is insignificant difference in the effectiveness of canine retraction with different bracket slot size appliances. • Evaluation of the bracket slot and archwire dimensions precision

Recruiting12 enrollment criteria

Myofunctional Therapy Twin Block

MalocclusionAngle Class II

There are situations where orthodontic treatment cannot provide long-term benefits. The proposed orthotropic theory proposes that environmental factors cause malocclusion and genes decide its pattern. The primary aim of this project is to increase the success, aesthetics and permanence of the treatment result by providing the best facial change of the pediatric patients in the MP3cap period, and that myofunctional exercises can be used in addition to orthodontic treatments during the treatment process of the patients.

Recruiting13 enrollment criteria

Effect of Extraction Vs Non-extraction Orthodontic Treatment on Vertical Facial Dimension

MalocclusionLong Face Syndrome2 more

The aim of the current clinical trial was to evaluate the effects of premolar extractions compared with non-extraction orthodontic treatment on the skeletal vertical dimension of the face. The null-hypothesis is that there is no difference in post-treatment skeletal vertical characteristics of normodivergent and hyperdivergent patients treated orthodontically with first premolar extractions compared with patients treated in non-extraction manner.

Recruiting7 enrollment criteria
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