Effect of Head and Tongue Posture on the Pharyngeal Airway Dimensions and Morphology in Three-Dimensional Imaging: a Systematic Review

Objectives: Natural head position is recommended to be optimal at cone-beam computed tomography acquisition. For standardization purposes in control of treatment outcome, it is clinically relevant to discuss, if a change of posture from natural head position may have an effect on the pharyngeal airw...

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Main Authors: Sirwan Fernandez Gurani, Gabriele Di Carlo, Paolo M. Cattaneo, Jens Jørgen Thorn, Else Marie Pinholt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Stilus Optimus 2016-03-01
Series:eJournal of Oral Maxillofacial Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ejomr.org/JOMR/archives/2016/1/e1/v7n1e1ht.htm
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spelling doaj-73aaf2d959fc499492192638e3f9312d2020-11-24T22:43:44ZengStilus OptimuseJournal of Oral Maxillofacial Research2029-283X2016-03-0171e110.5037/jomr.2016.7101Effect of Head and Tongue Posture on the Pharyngeal Airway Dimensions and Morphology in Three-Dimensional Imaging: a Systematic ReviewSirwan Fernandez GuraniGabriele Di CarloPaolo M. CattaneoJens Jørgen ThornElse Marie PinholtObjectives: Natural head position is recommended to be optimal at cone-beam computed tomography acquisition. For standardization purposes in control of treatment outcome, it is clinically relevant to discuss, if a change of posture from natural head position may have an effect on the pharyngeal airway dimensions and morphology, during computed tomography, cone-beam computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging acquisition. This was the aim of the present literature review study for purposes of valid evidence, which was hypothesized, to be present. Material and Methods: This systematic literature review has been registered in PROSPERO database with following number: CRD42015024567. A systematic literature search performed in PubMed, Embase and Cochrane was carried out in order to evaluate if the effect of human head or tongue posture has an effect on upper airway dimensions and morphology in CT, CBCT or MRI. Study quality assessment was performed. Predictor variable was head and tongue posture. Endpoints were numerical values of upper airway dimensions and morphology. Results: Overall 1344 articles (Embase 1063, PubMed 269, and Cochrane 12) resulted in four included publications. Quality assessments revealed poor quality and low-level evidence by 46 - 67% of the maximum achievable score. Heterogeneous methodology made a meta-analysis impossible, consequently a narrative synthesis was performed. Conclusions: Limited, poor quality and low evidence level literature is available on the effect of head posture on upper airway dimensions and morphology in three-dimensional imaging. Valid evidence requires a standardized method of head and tongue posture during image acquisition in future studies.http://www.ejomr.org/JOMR/archives/2016/1/e1/v7n1e1ht.htmcone-beam computed tomographymagnetic resonance imagingobstructive sleep apneaorthognathic surgeryposture
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sirwan Fernandez Gurani
Gabriele Di Carlo
Paolo M. Cattaneo
Jens Jørgen Thorn
Else Marie Pinholt
spellingShingle Sirwan Fernandez Gurani
Gabriele Di Carlo
Paolo M. Cattaneo
Jens Jørgen Thorn
Else Marie Pinholt
Effect of Head and Tongue Posture on the Pharyngeal Airway Dimensions and Morphology in Three-Dimensional Imaging: a Systematic Review
eJournal of Oral Maxillofacial Research
cone-beam computed tomography
magnetic resonance imaging
obstructive sleep apnea
orthognathic surgery
posture
author_facet Sirwan Fernandez Gurani
Gabriele Di Carlo
Paolo M. Cattaneo
Jens Jørgen Thorn
Else Marie Pinholt
author_sort Sirwan Fernandez Gurani
title Effect of Head and Tongue Posture on the Pharyngeal Airway Dimensions and Morphology in Three-Dimensional Imaging: a Systematic Review
title_short Effect of Head and Tongue Posture on the Pharyngeal Airway Dimensions and Morphology in Three-Dimensional Imaging: a Systematic Review
title_full Effect of Head and Tongue Posture on the Pharyngeal Airway Dimensions and Morphology in Three-Dimensional Imaging: a Systematic Review
title_fullStr Effect of Head and Tongue Posture on the Pharyngeal Airway Dimensions and Morphology in Three-Dimensional Imaging: a Systematic Review
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Head and Tongue Posture on the Pharyngeal Airway Dimensions and Morphology in Three-Dimensional Imaging: a Systematic Review
title_sort effect of head and tongue posture on the pharyngeal airway dimensions and morphology in three-dimensional imaging: a systematic review
publisher Stilus Optimus
series eJournal of Oral Maxillofacial Research
issn 2029-283X
publishDate 2016-03-01
description Objectives: Natural head position is recommended to be optimal at cone-beam computed tomography acquisition. For standardization purposes in control of treatment outcome, it is clinically relevant to discuss, if a change of posture from natural head position may have an effect on the pharyngeal airway dimensions and morphology, during computed tomography, cone-beam computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging acquisition. This was the aim of the present literature review study for purposes of valid evidence, which was hypothesized, to be present. Material and Methods: This systematic literature review has been registered in PROSPERO database with following number: CRD42015024567. A systematic literature search performed in PubMed, Embase and Cochrane was carried out in order to evaluate if the effect of human head or tongue posture has an effect on upper airway dimensions and morphology in CT, CBCT or MRI. Study quality assessment was performed. Predictor variable was head and tongue posture. Endpoints were numerical values of upper airway dimensions and morphology. Results: Overall 1344 articles (Embase 1063, PubMed 269, and Cochrane 12) resulted in four included publications. Quality assessments revealed poor quality and low-level evidence by 46 - 67% of the maximum achievable score. Heterogeneous methodology made a meta-analysis impossible, consequently a narrative synthesis was performed. Conclusions: Limited, poor quality and low evidence level literature is available on the effect of head posture on upper airway dimensions and morphology in three-dimensional imaging. Valid evidence requires a standardized method of head and tongue posture during image acquisition in future studies.
topic cone-beam computed tomography
magnetic resonance imaging
obstructive sleep apnea
orthognathic surgery
posture
url http://www.ejomr.org/JOMR/archives/2016/1/e1/v7n1e1ht.htm
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