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Pre-eruption guidance

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pre-eruption guidance is an orthodontic treatment method that allows for expansion of existing erupting teeth long before they appear in the mouth. The use off pre-eruption guidance appliances and the timing of extractions of certain deciduous teeth aligns the teeth naturally as opposed to orthodontic mechanical movement of permanent teeth into alignment after they have erupted. Research shows that pre-eruption guidance produces far more stable tooth alignment than alternative treatments.[1]

As defined by the American Dental Association and The American Association of Orthodontists, pre-eruption guidance therapy is a treatment method instituted with the use of bimaxillary bilateral removable space maintainers and the removal of the maxillary right and left deciduous cuspids [baby teeth] at very specific times to allow for a more optimal eruption pattern for permanent teeth to enter the mouth.[2] An integral part of the success of this treatment is the timely removal of certain deciduous teeth.

Pre-eruption guidance is distinctive because unlike other approaches, a patients' treatment results are achieved physiologically through muscle movements and removable functional spacer maintainers.[3] instead of mechanically through dental braces. This alleviates the need for braces to mechanically align or essentially repair the effects of mature teeth that erupted misaligned and crowded.[4]

This form of early, interceptive orthodontic treatment can be started on certain types of tooth problems before all teeth have erupted. Pre-eruption guidance treatment is usually begun after the four permanent upper and lower front teeth have erupted (approximately age seven).[5] The goal of this treatment for a child of that age is to normalize and naturalize the dentition and then to allow the daily use of durable orthodontic retainers and the patient's natural muscle development to guide future erupting teeth into an optimal position in the mouth over time.

In some cases a second phase of treatment is necessary. This additional phase is significantly shorter and can be completed by the time patients who are not undergoing pre-eruption guidance are first beginning their treatments.

Cases in which the pre-eruption guidance process would be beneficial include improvement of dental alignment and correction of a functional occlusion (severe deep bite, severe overjet, constricted maxillary width, blocked out maxillary cuspids, lower crowding).[6]

One benefit of the pre-eruption guidance approach is not having to surgically remove any of the patient's permanent teeth. Additionally, patients undergoing pre-eruption guidance therapy often do not require a later phase of treatment involving application of fixed braces or permanent tooth extractions performed by an oral surgeon. This preventive treatment process may ensure a patient's teeth will erupt in a more ideal position and maintain their erupted position for the rest of the patients life.[7] However, like any orthodontic treatment, it is heavily dependent on the patients cooperation and support to succeed.

Due to the method's reliance on achieving results working with the patient's own physiology to align their teeth, practitioners help the patients achieve proper alignment for minimal cost. Patients may also avoid more expensive, later staged treatments involving permanent tooth extractions, longer time with fixed appliances, and additional visits to the orthodontist.

Further reading

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www.aapd.org/media/Policies_Guidelines/G_Periodicity.pdf
Mew JRC 2007. Facial Changes in Identical Twins Treated by Different Orthodontic Techniques. The World Journal of Orthodontics 8: 174-188. https://web.archive.org/web/20130628102954/http://www.facefocused.com/wjarticle.html

References

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  1. ^ American Journal of Orthodontics and DentoFacial Orthopedics "Preventive Treatment of Ectopically Erupting Maxillary Permanent Canines by Extraction of Deciduous Canines and First Molars: A Randomized Clinical Trial" March 2011. http://www.ajodo.org/article/S0889-5406(10)00764-X/abstract
  2. ^ American Dental Association's Current Dental Terminology User's Manuel, 2012 Edition as CODE 8060 (Appendix 1), “Interceptive Orthodontic Treatment of the Transitional Dentition.” http://www.dhhs.nh.gov/ombp/medicaid/children/documents/dpm.pdf
  3. ^ The guidance of Eruption Without Extraction: http://ejo.oxfordjournals.org/content/29/suppl_1/i107.full
  4. ^ Orthodontic braces
  5. ^ Ngan, Peter W.; Kao, Elizabeth C.; Wei, Stephen H. (1 April 2003). "Guidance of eruption for general practitioners" (PDF). International Dental Journal. 53 (2): 100–113. doi:10.1111/j.1875-595x.2003.tb00667.x. PMID 12731698. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 August 2014. Retrieved 27 February 2023.
  6. ^ Dentofacial Changes after Orthodontic Intervention with Eruption Guidance Appliance in the Early Mixed Dentition: http://www.angle.org/doi/abs/10.2319/012607-37.1
  7. ^ Treatment stability with the eruption guidance appliance. http://uningateresina.com.br/Dimon/Arquivos/Artigos/13279707934f2739e9e14b6.pdf