Mesiodistal root angulation of permanent teeth in children with mixed dentition and normal occlusion

OBJECTIVE: There is little information regarding the mesiodistal angulation of permanent teeth in mixed dentition. The aim of this study was to evaluate mesiodistal root angulation of permanent incisors, canines and first molars of 100 Brazilian children, using a new horizontal reference plane based on the midpoint of the intercuspation of primary canines and permanent first molars in panoramic radiographs during the mixed-dentition phase. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Children were equally divided between the genders with a mean age of 8.9 years (SD=0.76), normal occlusion and no eruptive disturbances. RESULTS: The angulation of the permanent maxillary first molars was close to the vertical, whereas the mandibular molars presented approximately 25 degrees of distal root angulation. The maxillary canines were the most distally angulated teeth, whereas the permanent mandibular canines were vertically positioned. The evaluation of the anterior maxillary area showed vertical position of permanent lateral, and central incisors with a slight distal angulation, whereas the permanent mandibular incisors tended to a mesial radicular convergence. CONCLUSIONS: The proposed reference line could be useful in mixed dentition root angulation evaluation; there was a slight asymmetry in the mesiodistal angulation among homologous teeth, and also a small variation between the male and the female groups, but no difference between 8-and 10-year-old children.

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Main Authors: Jesuino,Flávia A. S., Costa,Luciane R., Valladares-Neto,José
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Faculdade De Odontologia De Bauru - USP 2010
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1678-77572010000600015
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spelling oai:scielo:S1678-775720100006000152011-01-14Mesiodistal root angulation of permanent teeth in children with mixed dentition and normal occlusionJesuino,Flávia A. S.Costa,Luciane R.Valladares-Neto,José Panoramic radiography Mixed dentition Interceptive orthodontics Dental occlusion OBJECTIVE: There is little information regarding the mesiodistal angulation of permanent teeth in mixed dentition. The aim of this study was to evaluate mesiodistal root angulation of permanent incisors, canines and first molars of 100 Brazilian children, using a new horizontal reference plane based on the midpoint of the intercuspation of primary canines and permanent first molars in panoramic radiographs during the mixed-dentition phase. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Children were equally divided between the genders with a mean age of 8.9 years (SD=0.76), normal occlusion and no eruptive disturbances. RESULTS: The angulation of the permanent maxillary first molars was close to the vertical, whereas the mandibular molars presented approximately 25 degrees of distal root angulation. The maxillary canines were the most distally angulated teeth, whereas the permanent mandibular canines were vertically positioned. The evaluation of the anterior maxillary area showed vertical position of permanent lateral, and central incisors with a slight distal angulation, whereas the permanent mandibular incisors tended to a mesial radicular convergence. CONCLUSIONS: The proposed reference line could be useful in mixed dentition root angulation evaluation; there was a slight asymmetry in the mesiodistal angulation among homologous teeth, and also a small variation between the male and the female groups, but no difference between 8-and 10-year-old children.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessFaculdade De Odontologia De Bauru - USPJournal of Applied Oral Science v.18 n.6 20102010-12-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1678-77572010000600015en10.1590/S1678-77572010000600015
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country Brasil
countrycode BR
component Revista
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databasecode rev-scielo-br
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region America del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Jesuino,Flávia A. S.
Costa,Luciane R.
Valladares-Neto,José
spellingShingle Jesuino,Flávia A. S.
Costa,Luciane R.
Valladares-Neto,José
Mesiodistal root angulation of permanent teeth in children with mixed dentition and normal occlusion
author_facet Jesuino,Flávia A. S.
Costa,Luciane R.
Valladares-Neto,José
author_sort Jesuino,Flávia A. S.
title Mesiodistal root angulation of permanent teeth in children with mixed dentition and normal occlusion
title_short Mesiodistal root angulation of permanent teeth in children with mixed dentition and normal occlusion
title_full Mesiodistal root angulation of permanent teeth in children with mixed dentition and normal occlusion
title_fullStr Mesiodistal root angulation of permanent teeth in children with mixed dentition and normal occlusion
title_full_unstemmed Mesiodistal root angulation of permanent teeth in children with mixed dentition and normal occlusion
title_sort mesiodistal root angulation of permanent teeth in children with mixed dentition and normal occlusion
description OBJECTIVE: There is little information regarding the mesiodistal angulation of permanent teeth in mixed dentition. The aim of this study was to evaluate mesiodistal root angulation of permanent incisors, canines and first molars of 100 Brazilian children, using a new horizontal reference plane based on the midpoint of the intercuspation of primary canines and permanent first molars in panoramic radiographs during the mixed-dentition phase. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Children were equally divided between the genders with a mean age of 8.9 years (SD=0.76), normal occlusion and no eruptive disturbances. RESULTS: The angulation of the permanent maxillary first molars was close to the vertical, whereas the mandibular molars presented approximately 25 degrees of distal root angulation. The maxillary canines were the most distally angulated teeth, whereas the permanent mandibular canines were vertically positioned. The evaluation of the anterior maxillary area showed vertical position of permanent lateral, and central incisors with a slight distal angulation, whereas the permanent mandibular incisors tended to a mesial radicular convergence. CONCLUSIONS: The proposed reference line could be useful in mixed dentition root angulation evaluation; there was a slight asymmetry in the mesiodistal angulation among homologous teeth, and also a small variation between the male and the female groups, but no difference between 8-and 10-year-old children.
publisher Faculdade De Odontologia De Bauru - USP
publishDate 2010
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1678-77572010000600015
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