Use of bone-borne expansion in the adolescent population increased the extent of skeletal changes in the range of 1.5 to 2.8 times that of tooth-borne expansion and did not result in any dental side effects.
Objectives:
The objectives of the study were to compare the skeletal, dentoalveolar, and periodontal changes between two types of microimplant-assisted rapid maxillary expansion appliances: The bone-anchored maxillary expanders (BAME) and the tooth-bone-anchored maxillary skeletal expander (MSE).
Materials and Methods:
Thirty-four patients with a transverse maxillary deficiency were divided into two groups; the first group (16 patients, average age 14.9 years) was treated with the MSE appliance, and the second group (18 patients, average age 13.8 years) was treated with the BAME appliance. Cone-beam computed tomography scans were taken at pre-treatment (T1) and immediately post-expansion (T2) to measure the changes in midpalatal suture opening, total expansion (TE), alveolar bone bending, dental tipping (DT), and buccal bone thickness. Data were analyzed using paired t-test and two-sample t-test.
Results:
Midpalatal suture separation was found in 100% of the patients in both groups. The TE at the first molar was 5.9 mm in the MSE group and 4.7 mm in the BAME group. The skeletal contributions were 56% and 83% of TE for the MSE and BAME groups, respectively. Significantly less dental buccal tipping and buccal bone loss were found with the BAME group. The midpalatal suture in both groups exhibited a parallel opening pattern in the axial plane.
Conclusion:
The use of BAME appliance resulted in greater skeletal effects, less dental tipping, and less buccal bone reduction compared to MSE appliance (immediately after maxillary expansion).
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