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Dento-Facial Orthopaedics & Orthodontics
Understanding maxilo-facial orthopaedics has
become the foundation for modern orthodontics.
Over eighty five percent of all patients have some
type of maxillary deficiency.This deficiency may
express itself as a transverse problem, it can be
seen in an anterior – posterior direction,
resulting in a short maxilla; and it can be seen
in a retrognathic position of the maxilla relative
to the anterior cranial base.These deficiencies
can also occur in any combination.
When the maxilla is under developed in any of
these three planes, there is a negative effect on
the patient’s facial growth and dentition.For
example, a transverse deficiency (narrow arch) not
only creates dental crowding, but also traps the
mandible preventing normal forward and downward
growth.Some types of maxillary entrapment can
always be seen in the skeletal class II
patient.
In addition to affecting the growth of the
patient, maxillary entrapment upon the mandible
can force the mandibular condyles distally within
the glenoid fossa.This distal position of the
condyle relative to the meniscus is the primary
cause of temporal-mandibular dysfunction.
The symptoms may include pain within the joint,
tinnitus, vertigo, difficulty in opening and
closing the mouth, and a wide variety of head and
neck pain.
The maxilla also has a direct effect on the
function of the respiratory system.When the
maxilla is narrow, the palatal vault will be
high.This in turn causes the nasal passage to be
constricted both transversely and vertically.The
patient is forced to mouth breath creating a
severe vertical growth pattern with the face.Other
respiratory effects include chronic inflammation
of the tonsil and adenoid tissue and middle ear
infections due to reflux within the Eustachian
tube.Many children who have had tubes placed in
their ears on a regular basis return to normal
function by simply developing the size of the
maxilla.
The most obvious clinical effect of an
under-development of the maxilla is the change
that occurs in the facial profile.The severe
skeletal class II patient that presents as a
“chinless wonder” can easily be corrected after
the maxilla is properly developed.
Certainly the orthodontic component of any
malocclusion must be addressed with fixed
appliance therapy.This phase of the treatment
usually follows the completion of the
maxilo-facial orthopaedic therapy.Most fixed
orthodontic treatments are now twelve months or
less.
A large majority of the patients can be treated on
a non-extraction basis.
Treatment of a structural nature is often far
easier than you may think, as you will discover
should you decide to invest in your future and
attend a forthcoming course I, the first in a
series of six courses which are designed to take
you from the very basics, right through to the
most complex of cases.
Our objectives should be to create beautiful
smiles, pleasing facial aesthetics, healthy
temporal-mandibular joints and an occlusion that
will last a lifetime.
Dr J. W. Truitt, B.S., D.D.S.
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