Abstract

To evaluate changes in head position following the use of low pull headgear (LHG) and compare these changes with an untreated control group. The test group comprised pre-treatment and post-treatment lateral cephalograms of 30 males, aged 11±1.5years, who were receiving LHG therapy for correction of Class II malocclusion. Pre-observation and post-observation lateral cephalograms of 25 untreated male subjects, aged 11±1.6years, served as controls. The average treatment time for the treatment group was 12±2.02months and the average observation period for the control group was 11±1.03months. Four postural variables (NSL/CVT, NSL/OPT, CVT/HOR, OPT/HOR) were measured to evaluate the head position in all subjects pre- and post-observations. There was no significant difference in all the measurements concerning the head position within each group (p>0.05). The mean differences of pre- and post-observations of 4 postural variables in the LHG group were 1.43, 0.9, -1.13, and -1.08, while those of the control group were 1.56, -0.32, -0.24, and 0.04, respectively. There was no significant difference between the headgear and control groups for any of the postural variables measured (p=0.924, 0.338, 0.448, and 0.398, respectively). Although postural variables showed considerable variability in both groups, head position exhibited no significant changes over a period of 11-12months either in the control or headgear group.

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