Abstract

The dental casts and cephalometric records of forty-three patients exhibiting bilateral congenital absence of maxillary lateral incisors were evaluated to determine the nature and extent of any concurrent craniofacial and dental anomalies. The effects of bilateral orthodontic space closure were evaluated on a subsample of twenty-two cases. The data revealed normal dental arch length, arch width, overjet, and overbite, while significant tooth size discrepancies were found in several anterior and posterior teeth. Craniofacial deviations from normal included smaller maxillary length, smaller mandibular length, smaller anterior cranial base, and nasal bone. Vertical facial dimensions, both anterior and posterior, were significantly less, as was the mandibular plane angle. Soft-tissue examination revealed a 10 ° greater nasiolabial angle, which was increased a further 5 ° as a result of a mean incisor retraction of 1.5 mm during space closure. The craniofacial anomalies noted in the present sample were similar to those seen in persons with clefts and may reflect a common etiology related to a developmental disturbance during fusion of the facial processes in utero. In the treatment of patients with bilateral congenital absence of maxillary incisors, mechanotherapy designed to open the mandibular plane, increase the vertical dimension, and move the maxillary posterior teeth forward is recommended in order to prevent worsening the Class III tendency and to minimize maxillary incisor and upper lip retraction. Most cases will require significant mesiodistal reduction in tooth size in order to achieve an optimal occlusion.

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