Abstract

BackgroundThe aim of this study was to investigate the effect of surface roughening and acid etching on clinical success rate and removal and insertion torque of orthodontic miniscrews.Materials and methodsSixty-two orthodontic miniscrews (Jail Medical Corporation, Seoul, Korea) with the same design and dimensions (10-mm length, 2-mm diameter) are divided into two (sandblasted and acid-etched versus control) groups. The sample of the study was 31 patients whose miniscrews were needed for en masse retraction of the upper six anterior teeth. In this split-mouth study, the miniscrews were placed in the attached gingiva between the second premolar and the first molar. The side (left or right) was selected randomly. The miniscrews were loaded 6 weeks after insertion, and the patients were followed up after 3, 6, 10, 14, and 18 weeks and then for 4 weeks interval. Chi-square, correlation, and independent t tests were done using SPSS ver24 to interpret the data.ResultsThe survival rate was 90.3% and 83.9% for the sandblasted and acid-etched versus the control group, respectively. The difference in survival rate was not statistically significant (p > 0.05). Removal torque was higher for the sandblasted group (p < 0.05). Younger patients showed less survival rate (p < 0.05) in both groups. Insertion side, namely, left or right, was not statistically significant.ConclusionsAlthough sandblasting increased removal torque, it did not influence the survival rate of orthodontic miniscrews significantly.

Highlights

  • The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of surface roughening and acid etching on clinical success rate and removal and insertion torque of orthodontic miniscrews

  • The purpose of the present study was to investigate the effect of surface roughening by sandblasting and acid etching on survival rate and removal and insertion torque of orthodontic miniscrews in a split-mouth study

  • The success rate was higher for the sandblasted acid-etched (SAE) compared to the control group, the difference was not significant

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Summary

Introduction

The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of surface roughening and acid etching on clinical success rate and removal and insertion torque of orthodontic miniscrews. Providing the adequate anchorage is necessary in many orthodontic treatments to control the reciprocal force of tooth movement [1]. Miniscrews have been introduced in orthodontics as a skeletal anchorage that can tolerate reaction forces applied to the teeth [2] and. The success rate of orthodontic miniscrews varies from 60 to 91%. Partial osseointegration of mini-implants may improve the stability [4, 6], the stability of orthodontic miniscrews depends on mechanical locking of the threads rather than osseointegration [7].

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