Abstract

This study investigated the effects of different doses of parathyroid hormone (PTH) on orthodontic tooth movement after mandibular ramus osteotomy and the associated dose-response relationship. One-hundred twenty rabbits were divided into 2 experimental groups (A and B) and 2 control groups (control group and negative control group). An experimental model of mandibular ramus osteotomy with installation of an orthodontic tooth movement device was established in groups A and B and the control group. After surgery, groups A and B received intermittent subcutaneous injections of PTH, 20 and 40μg/kg, respectively, and the control group received injections of normal saline solution. The negative control group underwent installation of the orthodontic tooth movement device without mandibular ramus osteotomy and received normal saline solution after surgery. Changes in expression of RANKL and RUNX2 in the periodontal tissues of the first molars were evaluated by means of immunohistochemical analysis and quantitative fluorescence polymerase chain reaction. Movement of the first molars was more rapid in group B than in group A in the 21days after surgery. Significantly higher RANKL mRNA levels and lower RUNX2 mRNA levels were detected on the compression side of the periodontal tissues in groups A and B than in the control groups. There was a significant difference in RANKL and RUNX2 expression levels between group B and the control groups at all time points. Mandibular ramus osteotomy combined with high-dose PTH can increase catabolism on the compressed periodontal tissues, thereby accelerating remodeling of periodontal bone and promoting orthodontic tooth movement after surgery.

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