Abstract

This study assessed the dental and skeletal effects of pure bone-borne, non-surgical maxillary expansion, using a modified force-controlled polycyclic protocol. Records of 17 adult patients, mean age 24.1 years; range 18-39 years, who had undergone maxillary expansion using a bone-borne Quad-expander (with 4 mini-screws), were analysed. In all patients, 0.17mm/day of expansion was completed for 1 week, followed by a cyclic protocol of expansion of forward and backward turns until the force needed to turn the expander was below 400 cN, assessed weekly. After this, expansion continued at a rate of 0.17mm/day until the desired amount of expansion was achieved. Cone beam computer tomography scans were taken pre- and post-expansion. The mid-palatal suture was successfully opened in 100% of patients included in this study. Axially, the amount of skeletal opening at the posterior nasal spine was 61% of the anterior nasal spine. Expansion was pyramidal in the coronal plane. Significant increases at the dental and skeletal levels were achieved, with changes at the skeletal level reaching 73%. The alveolar bone angle increased more than the angular changes at the molars and premolars. This is a retrospective study with short-term results. The Quad-expander, with a force-controlled polycyclic expansion protocol, effectively produced a significant increase in maxillary width in skeletally mature subjects in the short term.

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