Title of article :
Comparative assessment of soft-tissue changes in Class II Division 1 patients following extraction and non-extraction treatment
Author/Authors :
Lata Verma, Sneh Departments of Orthodontics - B.B.D. College of Dental Sciences - Uttar Pradesh, India , Prakash Sharma, Vijay Chandra Dental College and Hospital - Barabanki, India , Prakash Singh, Gyan Department of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopaedics - Chhatrapati Shahu Ji Maharaj Medical University (Earstwhile K.G.M.C.) - Lucknow - Uttar Pradesh, India , Sachan, Kiran Departments of Orthodontics - B.B.D. College of Dental Sciences - Uttar Pradesh, India
Abstract :
Background: The extraction of teeth for orthodontic purpose has always been a controversial
subject in the speciality. The aesthetics impact of the soft-tissue profile might play a key role in
deciding on premolar extraction or non-extraction (NE) treatment, particularly in borderline
patients. The purpose of this cephalometric study was to examine the soft-tissue treatment effects
of Class II Division 1 malocclusion undergoing extraction of all first premolars in comparison with
patients undergoing treatment with a NE approach.
Materials and Methods: Hundred post-pubertal female patients of Class II Division 1
malocclusion were selected. Group 1, treated with four first premolar extractions, consisted of
50 female patients with a mean age of 14 years 1 month. Group 2, treated without extractions,
consisted of 50 patients with a mean age of 13 years 5 months. Pre-treatment and post-treatment
lateral cephalograms of the patients were obtained. The pre-treatment and post-treatment stage
comparison and the intergroup comparison of the treatment changes were conducted between
extraction and NE groups of Class II malocclusion samples with t tests. The levels of significance
tested were P < 0.05 and P < 0.01.
Results: The main soft-tissue differences between the groups at the end of treatment were a more
retruded lower lip and a more pronounced lower labial sulcus in those patients subjected to extraction.
Conclusion: In Class II Division 1 patients, the extraction or NE decision, if based on sound
diagnostic criteria, seems to have no systematic detrimental effects on the facial profile.
Keywords :
Borderline extraction- NE subjects and standard edgewise mechanics , dentoskeletal changes , extraction- NE subjects and Class II Division 1 , soft-tissue profile
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics