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Published byGerald Jackson Modified over 9 years ago
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Supervisors: Dr Li Mei and Mrs Florence Bennani Survival times and reasons for failure of orthodontic retainers: a pilot study
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Introduction Orthodontic retention = “secondary orthodontic treatment” McCoy, 1935
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Definition Retention: “the holding of teeth following orthodontic treatment in the treated position for the period of time necessary for maintenance of the result” Moyers, 1973
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Factors contributing to relapse Contraction of stretched & displaced gingival & periodontal fibres Imbalance in soft tissue pressures vs new positions of teeth Post-treatment occlusal stability & functionality Reitan, 1967, 1969; Blake and Bibby, 1998; Littlewood et al., 2009; Shawesh et al., 2010
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Reitan, 1959 Animal study Teeth were rotated Following retention period of 232 days, supra-alveolar periodontal fibres continue to show displacement Fibrous tissue rearrangement even after several years!
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Period of retention New Zealand & Australia: >2 years (nearly 1/3 rd of orthodontists) Lifetime retention both removable & fixed – (over 1/5 th of orthodontists) Netherlands: >1 year - removable (80% of orthodontists) Permanent – fixed (84% of orthodontists) Wong and Freer, 2004; Renkema et al., 2009
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Choice of retainer type PPre-treatment occlusion PPost-treatment occlusion OOral hygiene PPatient compliance AAesthetics CComfort LLONGEVITY Wong and Freer 2004; Littlewood et al., 2009; Renkema et al., 2009
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Aims To assess: Survival times (range and rate) Reasons for failure of retainers used in the discipline of orthodontics To provide: Baseline for the choice of retention protocol
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Eligibility criteria Inclusion Fixed orthodontic appliances Initiated in 2010-2011 Completed by August 2012 Upper and/or lower retainers Minimum retention = 24 months Agreement to participate Postgraduate clinic
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Exclusion criteria Exclusion Incomplete / missing files Retainers worn <24 months Reasons for breakage irrelevant
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Method 60 patients Telephone contact Standard questionnaire: Demographic data Retainer types received Problems Survival time Confirmed with patients’ files
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Data analysis First retainers only Survival time in months From date patient received retainer failure date To end of August 2014
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Results 117 retainers included 38 lower fixed 11 lower vacuum-formed 17 upper fixed 30 upper Hawley 21 upper vacuum-formed
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Overall: Maxillary retainers – 58.8% Mandibular retainers – 59.2% Survival rate at 24 months
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Survival rate for upper retainers – 6 monthly intervals
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Survival rate for lower retainers – 6 monthly intervals Percentage Months
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Numbers and reasons for retainer failures Characteristics BrokenLostPoor FitDebond(Total) Maxillary Hawley 7310(30) Vacuum-formed 6210(21) Fixed 400 4(17) Mandibular Hawley 0000 (0) Vacuum-formed 1110(11) Fixed 30013(38)
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Discussion Interest of the study Retention time minimum 24 months Upper & lower retention regimen Findings Most failures in first 6 months except for lower vacuum-formed Early tendency for relapse? (Reitan 1967; 1979) Results in accordance with worldwide studies Limitation Retrospective data collection
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Discussion: further observations Retainer combinations 18 patients: UF + UV and/or UH Impact on survival time? 10 patients: UH + UV part time retainer wear
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Conclusion 24-month retainer survival rates: Lower vacuum-formed Upper Hawley (Breakage) Lower fixed (Debonding) Upper vacuum-formed (Breakage) Upper fixed
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Clinical relevance UUpper retainer of choice = Hawley LLower retainer of choice = Vacuum- formed SSchedule more review appointments during first 6 months of retention
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Thank you Questions?
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