Objective: To quantify the amount of perioral tissue changes following the extraction of four premolars in patients with bimaxillary protrusion who had nearly completed active growth. Materials and Methods: A literature search was conducted to identify clinical trials that assessed cephalometric perioral soft tissue changes in patients affected by biprotrusion and treated with extractions. Electronic databases (PubMed, ISI WoS Science Citation Index Expanded, and HubMed) were searched. Abstracts that appeared to fulfill the initial selection criteria were selected, and the full-text original articles were retrieved and analyzed. Only articles that fulfilled the final selection criteria were finally considered. Their references were also hand-searched for possible missing articles from the database searches. Results: Nine abstracts met the initial inclusion criteria and these articles were retrieved. From these, five were later rejected mostly because the sample dealt with growing subjects. Four articles remained and they showed that the upper and lower lips retracted and the nasolabial angle increased following premolar extraction. Upper lip retraction ranged from 2 mm to 3.2 mm, lower lip retraction ranged from 2 mm to 4.5 mm. Conclusions: The lip procumbency improves following the extraction of four premolars and this improvement is predictable. However, the changes are small and do not dramatically modify the profile. A ''dished in'' profile is not to be expected. Individual variation in response is large. (Angle Orthod 2010;80:211-216.)
The aim of the study was to evaluate the craniofacial morphology in Caucasian patients with sickle cell disease (SCD) by comparing them with a healthy group paired for gender and age, by means of lateral cephalometric radiographs. Thirty-six Sicilian patients with SCD (17 females and 19 males), including 14 beta(s)beta(s) (mean age 28 +/- 5.9 years), 13 beta(s)beta(0 th) (mean age 27.5 +/- 8 years), and nine beta(s)beta(+th) (mean age 32.8 +/- 9.9 years) were examined. The control group consisted of 36 subjects (mean age 28.9 +/- 8 years) without recognized haematological abnormalities. The means and standard deviations were calculated for each cephalometric variable. A two-sample t-test was used to compare the means between the study and control groups. One-way analysis of variance and Dunnet's multiple comparison test were used in order to analyse the differences between the control group and the subgroups divided according to genotype. The level of significance used was P<0.05. The cephalometric findings indicated a posterior rotation of the mandible and a tendency towards a vertical pattern (clockwise), with lower (P=0.000) and total (P=0.002) face heights increased in comparison with the control sample. These findings were more pronounced in subjects with SCD (beta(s)beta(s)). In all patients, there was a significantly greater maxillary incisor proclination than in the control group. The upper first molar position to the PTV line was significantly increased but only in patients with compound heterozygosis beta(s)beta(th). The SCD patients did not exhibit the craniofacial abnormalities noted in black American patients with SCD; the craniofacial features observed, reflecting the degree of clinical expression of SCD in Sicilian patients, were of moderate severity.
Craniofacial morphology of patients with nevoid basal cell carcinoma syndrome (NBCCS) has sometimes been reported at clinical examination, but any investigation has described it on the basis of cephalometric measurements.The purpose of this study was to conduct a cephalometric analysis of patients with NBCCS and to compare measurements with non-NBCCS subjects of similar ages, to elucidate if there is any relationship between NBCCS and craniofacial morphology.The study population consisted of 14 adult patients (9 men and 5 women), ranging in age from 18.2 to 56.8 years, with the diagnosis of NBCCS, with good-quality lateral cephalometric radiographs, and 14 adult healthy patients matched for age and sex to the NBCCS group. Cephalometric measurements were carried out on radiographs, and measurements of angles and distances were performed.Statistical differences between NBCCS subjects and controls were observed. Data analysis displayed that the measurements of the anterior cranial base (P
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