Morphometric Analysis of Mandibular Growth in Skeletal Class III Malocclusion

The craniofacial growth patterns of untreated individuals with skeletal Class III malocclusion have rarely been systemically investigated. This study used morphometric techniques to investigate the growth characteristics of the mandible in individuals with skeletal Class III malocclusion. Methods: L...

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Main Authors: Jenny Zwei-Chieng Chang, Yi-Jane Chen, Frank Hsin-Fu Chang, Jane Chung-Chen Yao, Wan-Hong Lan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2006-01-01
Series:Journal of the Formosan Medical Association
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0929664609601236
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spelling doaj-00600be2aa9e4357931c83bdfc97e1f82020-11-25T00:00:25ZengElsevierJournal of the Formosan Medical Association0929-66462006-01-01105431832810.1016/S0929-6646(09)60123-6Morphometric Analysis of Mandibular Growth in Skeletal Class III MalocclusionJenny Zwei-Chieng ChangYi-Jane ChenFrank Hsin-Fu ChangJane Chung-Chen YaoWan-Hong LanThe craniofacial growth patterns of untreated individuals with skeletal Class III malocclusion have rarely been systemically investigated. This study used morphometric techniques to investigate the growth characteristics of the mandible in individuals with skeletal Class III malocclusion. Methods: Lateral cephalometric head films of 294 individuals with untreated skeletal Class III malocclusion (134 males, 160 females) were selected and divided into five triennial age groups (T1-T5) and by gender to identify the morphologic characteristics and sexual dimorphism in changes of mandibular growth. Procrustes, thin-plate spline, and finite element analyses were performed for localization of differences in shape and size changes. Maximum and minimum principal axes were drawn to express the directions of shape changes. Results: From T1 (age 6-8 years) to T4 (age 15-17 years), the distribution of localized size and shape changes of the mandible was very similar between the two genders. From T1 to T2 (age 9-11 years), significant lengthening of the condylar region was noted (23.4-39.7%). From T2 to T3 (age 12-14 years), the greatest size and shape change occurred at the condylar head (27.4-34.9%). From T3 to T4, the greatest size and shape changes occurred in the symphyseal region (23.6-42.1%). From T4 to T5 (age ≥ 18 years), significant sexual dimorphism was found in the distribution and amount of localized size and shape changes. Females displayed little growth increments during T4. Despite differences in the remodeling process, the whole mandibular configurations of both genders exhibited similarly significant upward and forward deformation from T4 to T5. Conclusion: We conclude that thin-plate spline analysis and the finite element morphometric method are efficient for the localization and quantification of size and shape changes that occur during mandibular growth. Plots of maximum and minimum principal directions can provide useful information about the trends of growth changes.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0929664609601236Class III malocclusionfinite element analysisgrowth
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jenny Zwei-Chieng Chang
Yi-Jane Chen
Frank Hsin-Fu Chang
Jane Chung-Chen Yao
Wan-Hong Lan
spellingShingle Jenny Zwei-Chieng Chang
Yi-Jane Chen
Frank Hsin-Fu Chang
Jane Chung-Chen Yao
Wan-Hong Lan
Morphometric Analysis of Mandibular Growth in Skeletal Class III Malocclusion
Journal of the Formosan Medical Association
Class III malocclusion
finite element analysis
growth
author_facet Jenny Zwei-Chieng Chang
Yi-Jane Chen
Frank Hsin-Fu Chang
Jane Chung-Chen Yao
Wan-Hong Lan
author_sort Jenny Zwei-Chieng Chang
title Morphometric Analysis of Mandibular Growth in Skeletal Class III Malocclusion
title_short Morphometric Analysis of Mandibular Growth in Skeletal Class III Malocclusion
title_full Morphometric Analysis of Mandibular Growth in Skeletal Class III Malocclusion
title_fullStr Morphometric Analysis of Mandibular Growth in Skeletal Class III Malocclusion
title_full_unstemmed Morphometric Analysis of Mandibular Growth in Skeletal Class III Malocclusion
title_sort morphometric analysis of mandibular growth in skeletal class iii malocclusion
publisher Elsevier
series Journal of the Formosan Medical Association
issn 0929-6646
publishDate 2006-01-01
description The craniofacial growth patterns of untreated individuals with skeletal Class III malocclusion have rarely been systemically investigated. This study used morphometric techniques to investigate the growth characteristics of the mandible in individuals with skeletal Class III malocclusion. Methods: Lateral cephalometric head films of 294 individuals with untreated skeletal Class III malocclusion (134 males, 160 females) were selected and divided into five triennial age groups (T1-T5) and by gender to identify the morphologic characteristics and sexual dimorphism in changes of mandibular growth. Procrustes, thin-plate spline, and finite element analyses were performed for localization of differences in shape and size changes. Maximum and minimum principal axes were drawn to express the directions of shape changes. Results: From T1 (age 6-8 years) to T4 (age 15-17 years), the distribution of localized size and shape changes of the mandible was very similar between the two genders. From T1 to T2 (age 9-11 years), significant lengthening of the condylar region was noted (23.4-39.7%). From T2 to T3 (age 12-14 years), the greatest size and shape change occurred at the condylar head (27.4-34.9%). From T3 to T4, the greatest size and shape changes occurred in the symphyseal region (23.6-42.1%). From T4 to T5 (age ≥ 18 years), significant sexual dimorphism was found in the distribution and amount of localized size and shape changes. Females displayed little growth increments during T4. Despite differences in the remodeling process, the whole mandibular configurations of both genders exhibited similarly significant upward and forward deformation from T4 to T5. Conclusion: We conclude that thin-plate spline analysis and the finite element morphometric method are efficient for the localization and quantification of size and shape changes that occur during mandibular growth. Plots of maximum and minimum principal directions can provide useful information about the trends of growth changes.
topic Class III malocclusion
finite element analysis
growth
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0929664609601236
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