Journal article

Mandibular incisor inclination, tooth irregularity, and gingival recessions after Herbst therapy: A 32-year follow-up study


Authors listPancherz, Hans; Bjerklin, Krister

Publication year2014

Pages310-318

JournalAmerican Journal of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics

Volume number146

Issue number3

ISSN0889-5406

eISSN1097-6752

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajodo.2014.02.009

PublisherElsevier


Abstract
Introduction: The aim of this study was to analyze the very long-term results after Herbst treatment with respect to changes in the mandibular incisor segment: incisor inclination, incisor alignment, and gingival status. Methods: Fourteen patients were derived from a sample of 22 consecutive patients with Class II Division 1 malocclusions treated with the banded Herbst appliance. Intraoral photographs, mandibular dental casts, and lateral head films were analyzed from before (T1, age 12.5 years) and after (T2, age 14 years) treatment, and at 6 years (T3, age 20 years) and 32 years (T4, age 46 years) after treatment. Results: At T1, incisor inclination in the 14 subjects was, on average, 100.1 degrees. From T1 to T2, the incisors were proclined in 11 (79%) of the 14 patients, with an average value of 5.2 degrees. Maximum proclinations of 10 degrees were found in 2 subjects. From T2 to T4, tooth inclination recovered completely in 7 (63%) of the 11 patients. Incisor irregularity values were, on average, 3.4 mm at T1 and 3.0 mm at T2. These increased from T2 to T4 by 40% and had an average value of 5.0 mm at T4. Clinically insignificant labial gingival recessions on single front teeth were registered in 1 subject at T2 and in 8 subjects at T4. Gingival recessions were seen especially on bodily displaced incisors. Conclusions: In Herbst patients followed for 32 years after therapy, proclined mandibular incisors generally rebounded. The increase in posttreatment incisor tooth irregularity was not thought to be related to incisor tooth inclination changes but more likely resulted from physiologic processes occurring throughout life. Minor gingival recessions (especially on bodily displaced and crowded canines and incisors) seen in a few patients, 32 years after treatment, seemed not to be related to the posttreatment tooth inclination changes.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation stylePancherz, H. and Bjerklin, K. (2014) Mandibular incisor inclination, tooth irregularity, and gingival recessions after Herbst therapy: A 32-year follow-up study, American Journal of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics, 146(3), pp. 310-318. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajodo.2014.02.009

APA Citation stylePancherz, H., & Bjerklin, K. (2014). Mandibular incisor inclination, tooth irregularity, and gingival recessions after Herbst therapy: A 32-year follow-up study. American Journal of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics. 146(3), 310-318. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajodo.2014.02.009



Keywords


ANCHORAGEAPPLIANCE TREATMENTCAST SPLINTSCLASS-IIdental archPERIODONTAL STATUSPROCLINATION


SDG Areas


Last updated on 2025-02-04 at 02:12