Abstract

The goal was to investigate whether the application of antiseptics and fluorides during orthodontic treatment affects the biomechanics of the levelling of dental arches by changing the working properties of nickel-titanium (NiTi) archwires. The sample consisted of 60individuals aged 12-22years (53% females). There were 20individuals in each experimental group: (I)individuals conducted regular oral hygiene, (II)individuals used ahigh concentration of fluorides for intensive prophylaxis for the first month; and (III)individuals used chlorhexidine in the same manner. NiTi alloy archwires (dimensions 0.508 × 0.508 mm) were analyzed 3months after intraoral exposure and compared to as-received NiTi wires. Elastic modulus, yield strength, springback ratio, and modulus of resilience were calculated. Dimensions of the dental arches were analyzed when NiTi alloy (T1) was placed intraorally and after 3months (T2). Change was quantified as the difference in dimensions (T2-T1). Anterior width-to-length ratio was used as ameasure for dental arch shape. Intraoral exposure reduced elastic modulus, yield strength, springback ratio, modulus of resilience, loading, and unloading forces of NiTi wires (p ≤ 0.021). Chlorhexidine mouthwash and gel with high concentration of fluorides did not change these properties more than saliva with regular hygiene. The amount of change of dental arch shape in the maxilla and mandible did not differ significantly between the experimental groups. Using antiseptics or ahigh concentration of fluorides during orthodontic treatment does not significantly affect the mechanical properties of NiTi wires and would not have clinical implications in changing orthodontic biomechanics.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call