Introduction: the treatment of Class III malocclusion in early age is one of the greatest
challenges for orthodontists, and the establishment of more effective treatment
method is a constant concern for these professionals. Thus, the objective of this
systematic review is to verify the effectiveness of the therapy protocol for
alternate rapid maxillary expansion and constriction (Alt-RAMEC) in the early
treatment of Class III malocclusion. Methods:searches were performed in the following electronic databases: Cochrane Library,
Medline (EBSCO and PubMed), SciELO, LILACS and Scopus. The following inclusion
criteria were used: in vivo studies conducted with early
intervention (patient in craniofacial development phase) with the use of the
Alt-RAMEC protocol. Reviews, case reports, editorials, and studies with syndromic
patients or under use of systemic drug were excluded. Duplicates were also
excluded. The studies were assessed for methodological quality using the Cochrane
tool for assessment of risk of bias, and classified as high or low risk of bias.
Results:53 articles were found. Duplicates exclusion was thus performed and 35 articles
remained. After inclusion analysis, only 5 matched the criteria. Two articles were
classified as low risk of bias and three as high risk of bias. It was observed
that the Alt-RAMEC enable protraction in less time and with better results,
promoting greater effectiveness in the protraction treatment of Class III
malocclusion. Conclusions:Although there is positive evidence of the effectiveness of early treatment with
the Alt-RAMEC protocol in patients with Class III malocclusion, further studies
are needed to confirm its effectiveness using long-term methodology.
To seek scientific evidence to support the effectiveness of invisible aligners, in the aesthetic and functional aspects, compared with that of conventional braces. An electronic search was performed with a complementary grey literature search for in vivo research. No language restrictions were applied. Scopus, PubMed, Web of Science, Cochrane, ClinicalTrials and GreyLiterature databases were used. Studies were first selected by title and abstract; those potentially eligible were read in full. Non‐randomized studies were assessed for risk of bias using the tools Methodological Index for Non‐randomized Studies (MINORS) and Cochrane Collaboration Common Scheme for Bias as a function of the presence of randomization. The search found 559 studies, of which 55 were potentially eligible. A total of 4 articles were included in this systematic literature review: three non‐randomized controlled studies and one randomized controlled study, three with low risk of bias (RoB) and one with moderate RoB. Three studies showed time of correction of dental crowding shorter or equal to that of the control group and only one study showed less time of correction using conventional braces. Invisible aligners were deficient with respect to anterior/posterior and vertical corrections compared with fixed orthodontic appliances. Invisible aligners are effective in promoting dental alignment, but present clinical limitations in relation to the conventional system.
Intrusive force and pulp flow measurement W e read an article in the July issue entitled "Effects of magnitude of intrusive force on pulpal blood flow in maxillary molars" (Ersahan S, Sabuncuoglu FA. Am J Orthod Dentofacial Orthop 2015;148:83-9). While we were reading it, several doubts occurred to us, and we would like some explanations, if possible.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.