The lack of easily measurable, objective physiological activity parameters of the masseter and temporalis muscle during jaw movements in humans has led to the consideration to revise data of surface electromyographies (EMGs) by applying a computerized quantification method. The aim of this follow-up analysis was to get quantitative data out of EMG-records of an earlier study. These records were obtained with two different splints, splint 1 providing an anterior front-canine guidance and splint 2 providing bilateral balanced occlusion. Utilizing a computer aided integration method led to numeric results which statistically proves the prediction of the previous investigation. Applying the integration method, the EMG raw signal was transformed into area-values which enabled a statistical work up of the data. Wilcoxon test statistics shows a significant (P<0.05) lower muscle activity in patients wearing dentures providing anterior front-canine guidance compared to those with balanced occlusion. It is concluded that the neuromuscular activity of the elevator muscles is highly reproducible and that the neuromuscular function is similar in edentulous subjects to that found in people with natural teeth. Furthermore, the study statistically proves earlier visual data that all those subjects, whose muscle activities were observed with anterior guidance (splint 1) compared to bilateral balanced occlusion (splint 2) showed significantly lower values with regard to subjects wearing splint 2.
The incline and length of guiding elements, i.e. marginal ridges and lingual surfaces of front teeth, marginal ridges and internal cusp slopes of premolars and molars, play an important role in dentistry. Since the so far reported values differ considerably, it was the purpose of the present investigation to replicate the measurements, including all the occlusal landmarks proposed and defined by previous investigators. The measurements were performed on 34 pairs of mounted casts from a selected group of untreated, naturally grown dentitions from adolescents of mean age 14 years. The upper casts were mounted with a face bow, the kinematic hinge axis and the left incisura infraorbitalis representing the posterior and anterior reference points. The lower pinned casts were mounted joint related. All measurements were carried out with a computer-aided, three-dimensional digitizer. The inclines were expressed as angles related to the axis-orbital-plane. Taking the proposed occlusal landmarks as a basis, the inclines of guiding elements were found to be in agreement with previously reported values, despite ethnic and racial differences of the various study-populations. The values, however, differed markedly when measurements based on individual, functional relevant landmarks were compared to measurements based on anatomical, easy identifiable or mathematically constructed landmarks. The successive decrease of the inclines of the guiding elements from the central incisors to the second molars could be confirmed, the molars displaying very flat inclines. Interestingly, 9% of the first molars and 21% of the second molars showed negative values, pointing to a functional arrangement characterized by a buccally oriented occlusal surface of those teeth. Combined with the finding that the length of the guiding elements of the anterior teeth was almost twice as long as that of the posterior teeth, the results corroborate the occlusal concept of an anterior-posterior sequence of the guiding elements, or a so-called sequential guidance with front-canine-dominance.
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.