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  • Join me for a look into a recent digital innovation withinorthodontics, Lightforce. I explore how the 3D printedlabial bracket system works, the features and what the proposed advantages. Recentresearchexploring the advantages of Lightforce is discussed as well as my comparison toother digital innovations within orthodontic appliances.

    What is Lightforce

    · Manufacturing: 3D printed brackets Cad/Cam

    · Material: ceramic polycrystalline labial

    · Planning: Digital planning using Lightplan,visualisation of the outcome, alter both tooth position and bracket position,individualise prescription per bracket as a result of planned movements

    · Flexibility in positioning: Brackets do not have to be in the Facial Axisof the Clinical Crown, through altering the base thickness, the resultingmoment can be achieved through the center of resistance

    · Torque expression is independent of the vertical position, for the same reasons

    · 0.018", 0.020", and 0.022",including combinations

    Stages

    1. Submit records

    2. Digital planning using lightplan, visualisationof the outcome,

    3. Case approval

    4. Indirect bonding tray – light-Tray, with bracketsin situ

    Other advantages

    · Accuracy of 3D printed slot

    · Adapted base, less adhesive

    · Minitubes, biteturbos

    What are the proposed advantages and claims around Lightforcewith evidence

    1. Shorter duration of treatment due to precision

    a. JCO 2024 Wheeler 2024 Retropsectice study, 900 lightforcescases and over 300 conventional cases, 30%shorter and 30% fewer appointments. significant floors, with a lack of outcomemeasure and matching of controls

    Proposed advantages and claims around Lightforce ithoutevidence

    2. Reduced complications white spot lesions, dehiscencesand root resorption as relate to duration

    3. Remove issue of compliance or biomechanics as limitationsto treatment outcomes

    4. Saving Doctors time and money, removerepositions

    5. Reduce or eliminate wire bends

    What are my thoughts?

    · Labial fixed appliances are catching up withaligners and lingual appliances

    · New possibilities of varying biomechanics, slotsize, bracket position and customised prescription

    · Presence of Lighforce features within otherappliances:

    o Customised brackets Insignia / Incognito

    o Digital planning: aligners, Insignia

    · No customisation of archwires with Lightforce

    · Not sure how Lightforce would reduce appointmentintervals, ligation is conventional ligation through elastomeric modules, withplastic deformation

    Papers and videos on Lightforce

    https://www.jco-online.com/media/42415/2023_09_500_waldman.pdf

    JCO retrospective study

    https://www.jco-online.com/media/43897/2024_05_273_wheeler.pdf

    Youtube videos from Lightforce company, Alfred Griffin

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zSNkYVgZ69I&t=2s&ab_channel=People%2BPractice

    Disclaimer

    The podcast is opinion and may not be 100% accurate orrepresentative of the lecture / speaker, the podcast is not endorsed by aninstitute or the speaker and is the independent work of Farooq Ahmed and theOrthodontics in Summary team. It is not intended to over-ride or replace therequirement clinicians have in being familiar with the relevant training andguidelines for the treatment they provide.

    Contributions

    Contents and editing

    Farooq Ahmed

  • Join me for a podcast summary looking at the effects ofaligners when expansion occurs. In this podcast we will explore if bone lossoccurs with expansion and why bone loss doesn’t necessarily cause recession. Thepodcast is based on the lecture and research by Greg Huang presented at this year’sAAO, and includes some more recent research on the topic

    PICO

    Population adults, 22 maxillary arches, 20 mandibular arches

    Intervention – expansion with aligners, average 3.7mm

    Control – minimal expansion, average 0.6mm

    Outcome – bone height and width from CBCT

    What was the bone loss?

    Maxilla

    · Minimal bone loss

    · Minimal bone height and width change

    Mandibular

    · Significant bone loss

    · 1.5mm height mandibular centrals

    · 1.4mm height premolars

    What movement took place of the incisors?

    Maxilla

    · Little change in bucco-lingual inclination

    Mandibular

    · Labial and buccal tipping increased

    What were the overall changes?

    Dental changes

    · 3-4mm of expansion

    · Mainly atpremolars

    · Mainly buccal tipping, not bodily movement

    · Lower incisors procline

    Similar bone loss with aligners expansion from other studies,Zhang 2023 , Allahham 2023

    Should CBCT’s debate within the literature regarding voxelsize of a CBCT and false negatives. Accuracy of alveolar height CBCT 2019 Yuan Li BAsystematic review showed

    · CBCT Vs skulls/patients

    · Bone height 0.03mm

    · Bone width 0.11mm

    My thoughts: no difference in cbct and gold standard,however the measurements were all of large structures, not bone height orthickness of less than the voxel size

    Predict bone loss

    · Upper arch no predictors as limited changes

    · Lower arch, same as for fixed appliances, butthe quantity was missing

    o Proclination

    o Expansion

    o Buccal expansion and tipping

    Systematic review of orthodontics 48 articles deLlano-Pérula 2023

    · Proclination

    · Less keratinised tissue

    · Thin biotype

    · Prior recession

    · Crossbite

    · Previous recession

    · Age

    Does bone loss = gingival recession?

    · Not generally found from Greg’s study

    · When significant bone loss of 3mm, far less than3mm gingival recession

    Significant retraction of upper incisors and intrusion Kim2024. Loss of Palatal bone however in retention palatal bone recovered

    Hypothesis

    · If PDL and periosteum are maintained epithelium is maintained

    · If the root moves back into the bone, the bonerecovers – as PDL and periosteum osteogenic, and tension generated between PDLand periosteum

    · PDL-periosteum hypothesis – proposed by GregHuang

    What I liked about Greg’s lecture was that he started withdeclaring his conflict of interest as an academic, both the royalties hereceives for his books as well as research funding, which was great to hear anda trend I hope continues. Acknowledged the hard work of the research lead, his traineeand the time-consuming process of orientatingCBCT slices of 1000s of images

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  • “Airways are like TMD controversy on steroids”

    “it amazes me we still think we can grow mandibles”

    “We have an appliance (expansion) and are trying to fit it into a diagnosis”

    “it is unethical to call yourself an airway orthodontist”

    Sanjivan describes why there is controversy inairways and orthodontics, where the research stands on treatment with expansionand mandibular advancement, can mouth breathing cause adverse development, theeffects of extractions on the airway, as well as ethics within current practiceof airway orthodontics.

    Click on the link below to view previous episodes, to refresh topics,pick up tricks and stay up to date.

    YouTube

    https://youtu.be/m2NIp1XhnxQ

    #orthodontics

    #farooqahmed

    #sanjivankandasamy

    #westaustralianorthodontics

    #airwayorthodontics

    #airway

    #OSA

    #SDB

  • Join me for a summary exploring an innovation of the use of bone-anchored plates in class 2 correction. This was a clinically novel idea presented by Hugo De Clerck, who has been an innovator in the use of bone-anchored plates and has published seminal papers on the topic for class 3 treatment.Hugo explores the use of bone-anchored plates in the mandible, combined with a Herbst appliance. He presents his data of 90 patients treated in Brussels by his research team.PROTOCOLCustomised bone anchored plates in lower anterior mandible – digitally designed per patient with surgical guideTransmucosal between lower canine and 1st premolarHerbst: modified to attach from upper 1st molar to the lower bone anchored platesProcline upper incisors prior to fitting Bone anchored-HerbstExpansion of the upper arch2-3 modifications to Herbst piston to lengthen during treatmentDuration 10 monthsHOW DOES IT WORKGrowth of the mandibular body: mainly, bone modelling. Average growth 5-7mm, whereas conventional herbst 2-2.5mm of chin projection. New growth of bone as ramus moves backwards, resulting in lengthening of the mandibleForce generation: in similar to the conventional functional appliance, with contraction of medial and lateral pterygoid and stretching of the suprahyoid and temporalis muscleLower incisor proclination: No lower incisor proclination: There is a distal force on the mandibular dentition instead of a forward force from conventional functional appliances, due to the appliance attaching to the mandibular body, not the dentitionCondylar displacement: Longer duration, of up to 10 months which results in stimulation of growth of the body of the mandible, conventionally this stops with a herbst as the lower incisors procaine, resulting in only 2 months of condylar displacement and therefore less stimulation of growthGlenoid fossa remodelling. The glenoid fossa remodelled in a forwards direction, however it was small and unpredictable, with some posterior remodellingRotation of mandible – similar to the conventional functional appliance, a posterior rotation reduces the effects, anterior rotation enhances, for every 1 degree 1.1mm increase projection. Achieve via expansion and removable applianceUpper molar distalisation: Hugo saw this as unfafourable and advised lengthening the herbst piston to reduce upper molar distalisation, therefore maximising mandibular lengthening Age 13-15Not possible with miniscrews, due to the quantity of forceBreakages of Herbst still occurIs growth maintained long term – unable to stateNo control as requirement for cbct of untreated patients. ContributionsContents: Farooq AhmedEdited and produced: Farooq Ahmed

  • Join me for a summary looking intodifficult movements with aligners, why they are difficult, and a protocolderived from research on how to manage tooth movements with aligners. Thislecture was given by Bill Layman at this year’s AAO, where he describes maxillaryincisor extrusion, posterior intrusion, and controlled expansion.

    Introduction

    · Rate of refinement: 2.5 perpatient Kravitz 2022

    · 41% of aligner cases 3refinements +

    · Switch to fixed appliances fromaligners 1 in 6 Kravitz 2022

    Staging and synergistic movements can reducerefinement rates

    Incisor extrusion

    Why is Incisor extrusion difficult?

    · Lack of undercut

    · Sqeeze teeth to engage, creatingopposite effect due to V shape of a tooth – leading to loss of retention of thealigner

    · Interproximal binding through verticalcontact point overlap or slipped contact points and a closed system of aligners

    Incisor extrusion staging steps:

    1. Create undercut: Horizontalattachments are most effective, regardless of design Groody 2023

    2. Create 0.1mm between teeth torelieve interproximal binding

    3. First procline the incisors toincrease surface contact

    4. Then Extrude and retract

    Posterior intrusion

    Why is it difficult?

    · Multiple teeth and lack of anchorage,through anterior teeth

    · Crowns tip mesially duringintrusion as an unwanted effect

    · What happens when we intrude:

    o Mesial tipping of posteriorteeth Fan 2022 Finite element

    o Buccal and palatal attachments= less tipping buccal or lingual

    How to improve posterior intrusion

    · Sequential intrusion – 1stpremolars

    · Tip posterior teeth 5-10 degreesdistally

    · Horizontal attachment buccal /palatal

    · Consider attachment lingualUpper molars

    · Sequential intrusion

    · TADs not always needed, 5200 timesbite on hard surface, enables posterior intrusion through masticatory forces

    Controlled expansion

    Why is it difficult

    · Aligners tip teeth buccally =creates occlusal interferences

    · Lack of rigidity of tray toexert forces = straight finish trays increase rigidity

    · Attempting to correct skeletalproblems with dental solution

    · Greatest expansion in the premolarregion

    · Expansion from the researchshowed progressive less posterior expansion

    o Molars expand less due toanchorage loss

    · Expansion through tipping

    How to improve posterior intrusion

    · Plan around premolar expansion

    · Expect 70% in premolar region,55% molar and 46% canine

    · Overcorrection of canines 1.7mm(premolar region 3.4mm) Zhou 2020

    · Maximum expansion seen is 4mm

    Conclusion:

    · Incisor extrusion: proclineteeth with attachment, then extrude and retract

    o Include iPR

    · Posterior intrusion: Start withpremolars and sequentially intrude posterior teeth

    o Add distal tip

    · Controlled expansion: Effectivein premolar region

    o Plan with overcorrection

    Jay Bowman

    · “If you don’t build-inovercorrections you can’t get corrections”

    · “there many things that needimprovement at the end that aren’t hard to do if start treatment with theovercorrections in mind”

    Contributions

    Contents:Shanyah Kapour

    Editedand produced: Farooq Ahmed

  • Join me for asummary looking at fixed versus removable functional appliances. This podcastsheds light on recent research comparing the main two types of functionalappliances, which appliance offers the most advantages, and what patients thinkabout the two appliance types. This was a lecture given by Ama Johal at lastyear’s British Orthodontic Conference, where the most recent evidence carriedout by his PhD student Moaiyad Pacha.

    

    Moaiyad Pacha’sRCT 2023 – received Dewel 2024 clinical research award

    · Hanks Herbst Vs Modified Twinblock

    o Rollo bands

    o Expansion

    o No fixed appliances

    o Incremental advancement – no evidence to supportbut patient-centred

    · Overjet correction: More effective Herbstat 7mm Vs 5.8mm Twinblock ,

    · Molar and skeletal changes: no difference

    o Twinblock = greater residual overjet aftertreatment p=0.2

    · Dental changes: Herbst advance lowerincisor greater 3mm Vs 1mm

    · Failure to complete: 17% Herbst Vs 37%twin block

    o 3 times greater likelihood of discontinuetreatment OR 2.8

    · Treatment duration: longer with Twinblock1.5 months 8.8 Vs 10.3, and quicker rate of correction with Herbst

    · Chairside time : Greater than Twinblock2.7 hours longer, 7.6 Vs 4.9

    · Emergency appointments greater with HanksHerbst 2.7 Vs 0.3

    o Herbst mainly

    · Severe complications = same 0.5

    o Severe complications – previously defined asinvolving lab work or break in appliance wear from Pasha’s SR 2020

    Advantage of Hanks Herbst

    · Greater completion of treatment, 3 times lesslikely to discontinue

    · Quicker rate of correction, shorter duration,

    Disadvantages

    · Greater chairside time of nearly 3 hours

    · Greater emergency appointments, each patientneeding 2-3 emergency appointments

    Qualitative

    · Both appliances – very negative to QoL and dailylife

    · Aesthetic and self-image – worse with Twinblock

    · Patient preference – Herbst

    o Due to non-compliance and likely to get to theend

    · Positive Twinblock is flexible and easier to eat

    Conclusion was profound

    · Patients prefer Herbst, based on aesthetics,self image and non-compliance

    · Clinicians are likely to prefer Twinblock,quicker, easier, less emergencies

    Time to reconsider, and having both options, as well as bothdiscussing of clinician Vs patient preferences, should decide which appliance

  • Join me for a summary podcast exploring the topic of white spot lesions, and up-to-dateresearch looking at how to manage lesions when they occur, when the right timeis to treat the patient, and what minimally evasive options can be used in clinic. This was an excellent lecturefrom Gayle Glenn earlier this year at the AAO winter meeting.

    Four treatmentoptions are discussed, Fluoride, CPPACP (Mi paste), resin infiltrate andmicroabrasion.

    Whitespotlesion background WSL
    Definition - subsurface deminieralization,intact outer layer, 1st sign of carious lesions

    Remineralisation– no additional agents

    Most rapidrepair first 6 weeks without use of additional agents

    · Upto 6 months spontaneous improvement with good oral hygiene

    · Recommend3-6 months monitor after debond: BEFOREconsider additional treatment

    Fluoride

    · Decreaseenamel dissolution

    · Increasereminerazation

    · Formationof fluorapatite

    · Products

    o Fl varnishreduce WSL occuring by 44%:

    § require plaque removal and wire removal

    § Not often used in clinical practice and requiresrepeat application

    · TREATMENTWSL

    o Fluoride low dose (toothpaste)

    o High Fluoride – hyperminerasied surface layerforms = seal off subsurface layer which remains demineralized. Bishara 2008

    Resin infiltration Gray 2002

    · Remove outer hypomineralised area with 15% HFL

    o Infiltrate with low viscosity

    o Improves aesthetics

    o Arrest lesion – however some demineralisationmay remain

    o Lack long-term evidence

    o Most effective in research (RR:121.50, 95%CI:51.45-191.55 Jiang 2023)

    MI paste (CPPACP) Frencken 2012

    · Milk protein derived

    · Stabilizes Ca PO4 – ideal of for formed WSL

    · Creates Ca PO4 reservoir around bracket

    · Applied:

    o Brush above and below bracket or finger

    o Distributed by the tongue

    o Can be swallowed

    o Avoid eat and drink 30-60 minutes

    · Effectiveness for reminersation

    o Evidence unclear – conflicting sustematicreviews AlBukaiki 2023 no difference, same year Jiang 2023, it is effective, however exceptionally large rangeof values (RR:49.69, 95%CI: 0.87-98.51 and although RCTs, limited to assessingpremolars only and different methods of assessment and duration of treatment.

    · TREATMENT FOR WSL

    o Wait 3-6 months following removal of braces

    o In retainer 3-5 minutes

    o Rinse out

    o Nothing to eat 30-60 minutes

    Microabrasion

    · Combination of acid and abrasive particles

    · Burinsh into enamel with slow speed handpiece

    · opalustre = 6% HCL + silica (low particlesize, lower concentration with larger particle size than prophy paste = 12-160 particle size 1986 Krol)

    o 1 mm size of use

    o Burnished in using a polishing cup and slowhandpiece

    o 1 minute

    · Not widely accepted

    o Partly due to variations in protocol

    o Use of rubber dam

    · Microabrasion and CPP-ACP proposed idea Ardu2007

    2022 Lammert

    · CPP-ACP both sides, with half of mouth alsoreceiving 1 visit of microabrasion

    · After 6 months post debonding

    · Evaluate and repeat up to 8 times

    · Results

    o Mi paste group 9.3-8.1 size of lesion –statistically significant

    o Microabrasion and Mi paste group

    § 13.2 – 4.3and reduce to 2.1

    · Most improvement immediate after microabrasion

    o Compared difference of size of the initiallesion

    § 5.5 xreduction in CPPACP

    § 7.4 Xreduction in microabrasion

    Clinical implication

    · Microabrasion = significant clinical time

    o Up to 8 minutes per tooth, can be up to 1 hour

    o Therefore clinical application

    § Perhapsisolated 1 or 2 teeth

    Conclusions:

    1. Patientswith WSL are usually not great compliers, giving additional products whichrequire significant compliance, is practising research in isolation.

    2. Microabrasiontakes nearly 1 hour, role in clinical practice limited to isolated areas

  • Join me for a summary exploring bullying and itsrelationship with malocclusion, with a contemporary review of evidence showingthe psychological effects various malocclusions can cause young people. Thispodcast is a summary of Andrew DiBiase’s lecture last year at the BritishOrthodontic Conference. Andrew’s research explores what factors moderatebullying, and what factors can be protective against bullying.

    Introduction

    · Nearly 1 in 3 patients report teasing or fear ofteasing as a motivating factor for orthodontic treatment Bauss 2023 AJODO

    · 1 in 7 patients attending our clinics arebullied Seehra et al., 2011

    · Most upsetting feature of bullying teeth 60.7%Shaw

    · 13, 387 teenagers 25% report bullying

    o Around 7% related to teeth

    Definition of bullying: Olweus 1984

    · Unprovoked and sustained campaign of aggression,towards someone in order to hurt them

    · Student exposed repeatedly to negative action onthe part of one or more students

    o Harm, imbalance of power, organised, repetitive,harm experienced

    Who gets bullied and how?

    · Younger more – 10 year olds 22%, 15 year olds 7%

    · Girls are greater than boys by 5%

    · Boys low athletic competence

    o Judged on homour as well Langlois 2000

    · Girls appearance

    o We do judge girls on physical appearance Langlois2000

    o 80% verbal - Cyber bullying – doest stop at theschool gate

    Consequences of bullying

    · Short term and long term effects

    o Poorer academic performance

    o Crime

    o Self harm

    § 26% within young population and teeth occupyingthe reason in 1 in 5 young people Bitor 2022 AJODO

    o Low self esteem

    o Structural changes, medulla – related to fear(peer victimisation and its impact on adolescent brain)

    What features are more likely to result in bullyingDibiase, Jad Seehra 2014

    · Greater rate of bullying

    · 2 div 1: 18%

    · Increased overjet 16% Tristão SR 2020

    · Deep overbite

    · Missing teeth, anterior spacing

    · IOTN AC 9 and 10

    · Regression – younger worse

    · Low athletic competence p 0.019

    Conclusions

    · Relationship between bullying and severemalocclusion

    · Schoolchildren who report being bothered bytheir teeth report being lonelier at school and lower self-esteem

    · Malocclusion has a greater impact on femalesthan males

    · Malocclusion and peer relations is moderated byself-esteem in girls, but not boys

    · Good peer relations protect against the negativeimpact of malocclusion in girls with low or average self-esteem

  • Orthodontics and TMD, what is the role of orthodontics?

    “if you give a splint, it will not cure the TMD”

    “It depends on the adaptability of the patient”

    “The role of the patient in the treatment is very, very important”

    Roxana describes her journey into TMD and orthodontics, what led her to attend courses worldwide and also set up her own course on TMD.

    Roxana describes what has created the controversy in TMD management, and answers recent questions from the literature of the role of both orthodontics and splints in TMD management

    To book onto Dr Roxana Petcu’s courses please visit www.lazarlearning.ro/cursuri/ or roxanapetcu_ (I have no financial interest)

    Click on the link below to view previous episodes, to refresh topics, pick up tricks and stay up to date.

    Please like and subscribe if you find it useful!



  • Does whitening have a role in orthodontics? A popular cosmetic procedure which 1 in 4 adults partake in, and was proposed recently at a conference as part of finishing in orthodontics. So this podcast reviews whitening as a topic and the latest evidence in combining whitening with aligners.

    Reminder the podcast is an opinion piece and is the independent work of myself and the orthodontics in summary team.

    24% of adults have whitening their teeth (dentalhealth.org)

    How does it work:

    Bleaching is the chemical changing of darker staining on teeth termed chromogens, with the active ingredient hydrogen peroxide.

    Hydrogen peroxide reacts to oxidize the chromogen, which becomes a lighter colored compound.

    Hydrogen Peroxide is not a stable chemical, so Carbamide peroxide is used, which roughly breaks down to 1/3 H2O2 when mixed with water.

    Hydrogen Peroxide UK limit 6%, or Carbamide peroxide 16% is used, USA, greater concentrations are used with 10% hydrogen peroxide for at home whitening, and 35% hydrogen peroxide for in office bleaching.

    Children

    UK guidelines GDC 2014 – no bleaching until 18, unless purpose of treating or preventing disease.’

    USA: The AAPD 2023 s Safe and effective for whitening discolored teeth of children and adolescents. Avoid full-arch bleaching mixed dentition and primary dentitions

    Risks

    Sensitivity -

    about 80% of patient’s experience sensitivity

    Tooth sensitivity usually occurs at the time of treatment and can last several days

    Upper lateral incisors – greatest sensitivity

    Directly correlated with concentration

    Greater intensity if tooth was restored Bonafe 2013

    Gingival irritation

    gingival irritation begins within a day of the treatment and can also last several days

    Susceptibility to demineralisation

    Suggested surface demineralization occurs as the pH of the whitening agent are acidic and hydrogen ions affect the enamel crystals,

    No difference when using manufacturers protocols including 35% H202 Tompkins 2014

    However aggressive whitening: excessive use of in office whitening Shi 2012

    How long does the whitening last

    Duration of correction, depends on lifestyle, with smoking and coffee reducing the correction. Expected 6-12 months of stable colour change. Wiegand 2008

    Aligners

    Bleaching tray is different – reservoir for bleach, 1 or 1.5mm soft ethylene-vinyl acetate (EVA), Straight cut 2mm beyond gingiva or scalloped, with 2 mm extension onto the gingiva giving a better seal and greater patient comfort. Dosage dots to limit application beyond 2mm

    Aligners

    Usually gingival bevelled, but as effective as bleaching trays, Levrini 2020 improvement of 3.5 shades on average Seleem 2021

    tooth sensitivity and gingival irritation does not disrupt of treatment 16% Carbamide peroxide Oliverio 2019, Levrini 2020

    2 mm thick layer of gel is advised at incisal or facial central surface of the aligner

    Bleaching with attachments present, when bleaching complete attachments removed:

    hydrogen peroxide diffuses through spaces between enamel prisms

    The composite attachment was thought to affect pigment infiltration, however with enamel polishing after composite removal, color equalization occurs without discrepancies Staley 2004

    Minimal change to aligner structure Oliverio 2019

    Retainers as bleaching trays?

    Use of 0.8mm Zendura, no resivoir, effective bleaching with marked or extremely marked improvement in 78% of cases with 10% Carbamide peroxide, however but this changed the VFRs’ biomechanical properties, decrease in tensile strength and an increase in hardness and internal roughness, unclear what the medium and long term effects are .Jin 2024

    Bond strength

    By Bleaching a tooth there is enamel bond strength reduction by 25 % Miguel 2006

    Wait 2 weeks after bleaching for aligner attachment placement.

    Bonded retainer has not been researched

  • Join me for a summaryof direct to print aligners. This lecture explores the application of a relativelynew resin material which can be used for aligner fabrication, without the needof a 3D printed model. The lecture was given by Simon Graf who expertlycompared the differences between conventional and direct to print aligners, aswell as the clinical application of specific features of direct to printaligners.

    Limitations ofcurrent aligner material:

    1. Only smallundercuts

    2. Limitedaligner thickness to sheet thickness / no selective thickness

    3. During themanufacturing process material can get thinner or thicker depending on heat distributionand stretch, 54% change in thickness of the aligner Lee 2022

    4. Plasticand resin waste, (122 million aligners and models in 2022 Slaymaker 2024)

    Advantages of directto print aligners

    · Select thickness, 0.5-0.7mm, conventionalaligners 0.75mm+

    · Gingival margin

    · Dentist incharge of design, not company

    Manufacturing stepsof Direct to Print aligners (Tera Harz ‘Graphy’)

    1. 3D printingof resin aligner

    2. Centrifuge:Spin remove excess resin

    3. UV Lightcure in Nitrogen chamber

    4. Washedtwice, hot distilled water

    Characteristics ofDirect to print aligners

    · Greater accuracy: (Zendura, EssixAce and DTP were compared and DTP were 20-30% more accurate Koenig 2022)

    · Less with DTP (Hertan 2022)

    o DTP 50%less still (2.59 Vs 5.26 N)

    o DTP Lessforce as strain increases

    Shape memory effect

    · DTP Polymer chains crosslinked, not case in conventional aligners

    o The shape recovers in DTP whenstrain is removed, which does not occur to the same degree in conventional alignersLee 2022

    o Accelerated by placing in water

    Unknowns

    · How effective shape memory is remains unclear

    · Cytotoxicity – not enough data, although manufacturerprotocols, lack of studies

    · Changing thickness, unclear how much of adifference in force it makes

    Clinical points

    Teeth extrusion

    Lateral incisors

    · Difficult to do with conventional aligners,

    · Create ‘wedging’ gingival pressure columns tosqueeze the teeth to cause an extrusive force.

    Elastic Hookswithout loss of force delivery on single tooth

    · Hook printed into aligner with DTP, instead of cutout which alters the force of the aligner instantly, maintain tooth control

    · Tip aligners and elastics: Still add attachmentto tooth to prevent aligner displacing

    Mandibular advancement

    · Problem of mandibular advancement with aligners

    o Wings softand not maintaining the AP position

    o Hard blockmany breakages

    · DTP choice of thickness of block

    Bite ramps

    Conventional biteramps: limited length and often too short

    DTP no limit to sizeand thickness, and can be designed to not contact upper palatal surfaces, maintainingfull tooth control

    In the Transverse

    o Palatalcoverage can be added as feature, similar to a TPA

    o Stillbeing researched how much force can be delivered with palatal coverage

    Concluding statement

    Enjoy the variabilityof direct printed aligners.

    Contributions

    Contents:Abdallah Sharafeldin

    Editedand produced: Farooq Ahmed

  • Join me for a summary looking at gingival recession in orthodontics, and whether it is detrimental or beneficial. This lecture was given by James Andrews, he explored the effect of orthodontics on the periodontium, an area under increasing interest within aesthetics to achieve the ideal ‘pink aesthetics’ with the increasing adult population receiving orthodontic treatment. His lecture was based on, is orthodontics good or bad for the gingiva?

    What is the starting point ?

    Increase in adult orthodontics from 1970 by 800%

    50% of adults have some element of periodontal disease

    Untreated adult population 51% dehiscence 37% areas of fenestration Evangelista 2010

    Facial type and bone morphology Tunis 2021

    Dolichocephalic = narrow alveolus and elongated to compensate for vertical growth

    Brachycephalic = larger alveolus

    Dolichocephalic - Red flag patients

    Tooth movement:

    What happens when teeth move buccally?

    facial tooth movement Wennström 1996

    Reduced bucco lingual width

    Therefore, reduced free gingiva

    Increased risk only if tooth is moved out of the alveolar housing

    What type of movement

    Tipping (uncontrolled) increase likelihood of recession Condo 2017

    Proclination causes recession, but inconclusive

    Thickness more relevant than final inclination Yared 2006

    How to decide what to do?

    WALA line – Will Andrews Larry Andrews ridge Andrews 2000

    Limit of labial bone – shape is coincident with the mucogingival junction, coincident with centre of resistance

    Upper incisors – located anterior 1/3 of alveolus

    Mandibular incisors – cantered within the alveolus

    Gingival recession did not increase in treatment orthodontic population with segmental mechanics Melsen 2005

    Aligners any different?

    Association between non-extraction clear aligner therapy and alveolar bone deficiency and fenestration

    Presence of both fenestration and dehiscence

    What do we do to correct extra-alveolar teeth?

    If teeth pushed outside of cortical plate then retracted, what happens

    Monkey – moved teeth outside of bone for 8 months, then reposition within bone with appliances = repair bony dehiscence and fenestration

    Morten Laursen and Melsen 12 consecutive patients 2020

    Teeth moved towards the centre of the cortical plate = improvement in gingival height of depth decrease of 23%, the width with 38%

    Intrusion

    Use of intrusion arch increases the thickness of the periodontal fibres 0.7 to 2.3 mm Melsen 1988

    Gingival graft when to move teeth

    Free gingival graft – 6 weeks

    Connective tissue graft – 12 weeks

    “Diagnose and treat each tooth no miracles shortcuts for good orthodontics” Peck 2017

  • Join me for a summary looking at miniscrews, looking atwhere the answer to successful TAD placement lies, in research or clinicalpractice. The reasons for higher failure rates than others with TADs wasexplored through 3 key factors; insertion torque, site selection and rootproximity. Evaluation of both scientific and clinical processes were describedby Sebastian Baumgartel at the British Orthodontic Conference, as theNorthcroft lecture.

    Is torque a factor in TAD success?

    Torque study – compression during insertion Motoyoshi 2006

    · High torque – 60%

    · Low torque = 72%

    · Medium torque – 92%

    Understanding

    · Low torque = low compression, low primarystability - early failure as not engagement with screw

    · High torque = high compression, early success,but greater resorption after insertion, remodelling results in a resorptionprocess

    · Medium = best of both = sufficient compressionfor primary stability, not high enough to cause resorption remodelling

    Ideal

    · Ideal torque range – 10 Ncm Shantavasinkal 2016

    o Study of buccal tads

    · Sebastian’s empirical experience between10-25Ncm depending on site

    Rules:

    · Aim for medium torque

    · Target 10Ncm

    · Exceed 10Ncm on palate acceptable

    What is the best site for TAD insertion?

    Keratinised gingiva

    · Evidence - states no difference Lim 2009, Chen 2008, Park 2006, Cheng 2004

    · Non Keratlised – depends on mobile or nonmobile, with non-mobile higher success rate Viwattanatipa 2009

    · 2mm apical to muco-gingival junction

    o zoneof opportunity

    Target zones and site

    o No roots

    o Consistent cortical bone

    o More tolerant to higher torque

    o Attached gingiva with low mobile mucosa

    Is there ideal bone?

    · = ifideal torque = ideal cortical plate thickness

    § 1-1.5mm cortical plate thickness

    · CBCT can be overkill, using research sites foraverage sites

    Ideal site:

    – 1st premolar region (transverse) Sebastian 2009

    – 2 mm away from mid-palatal suture

    o = creates ideal zone ‘Mx1’

    Evidence of site selection success

    · 98% Vs buccal 71% Houfar 2017

    · 84% Trainee success Sebastian 2020

    · Success of Sebastian anterior palate 100%, maxillarybuccal lowest 85%

    Does root proximity influence TAD success?

    · Not just contact with roots, but proximity toroot also causes failure Kuroda 2007, Asschericks 2008, Chen 2008

    Understanding

    o Increase root and PDL proximity = bone stress increases = increase bone turnover= increase failure of TAD

    · 4mm interradicular distance needed (depending onsize of tad) to achieve 1 mm clearance from roots

    · Most buccal sites have less than 4mm (resolvethrough diverging roots, or sites with no roots)

    What happens if TADs fail and we try again?

    – Secondary insertion success

    o 58% (reduced by 33%) Park 2006

    o 44.2% (reduced by 36%) Uesugi 2017

    o 58.1% buccal (reduced by 21%), 88.9% palatal(increased by 4%) Uesugi 2018

    § Uesugi 2018 showed buccal failure increases forsecondary insertion, but palatal insertion increases success

    For more education see Sebastian’s TAD course:

    https://tadchallenge.com/tad-certification-course

    I have no financial interest

  • Join me for a summary of Tommaso’s lecture on aligner treatment, exploring questions on the use of aligners. Tommaso described how compliant patients are with the use of aligners, who is more likely to wear aligners well and methods to increase compliance. He critically reviewed the use of attachments, and revealed aligner deformation and staging as key areas of treatment. This podcast is a summary of the WFO online webinar from November patient compliance, biomechanics , rotation, distalisation and intrusion


    Patient Compliance

    Sample of over 200 patients treated with aligners under remote monitoring, Thirumoorthy 2021:

    36% of the sample was fully compliant

    25% has poor compliance

    1st time Ortho patients are more compliant

    Conclusion: early detect non compliant patients with remote monitoring

    Patient factors which vary compliance of removable appliances Fleming 2019

    The study came with some recommendations:

    Effective communication with our patients, with visual aid, pictures or movies.

    Using of tracking sensor included in the device

    Using some reminding tools – remote monitoringBiomechanics and material properties.Distalisation class 2Incisors intrusionConclusion

    We need to consider the lines of forces and aligner deformation not only on the attachments

    Any malocclusion that can be corrected by tipping has better predictability

    Add less activation Per aligner (to help flattening the steep decline in force over time and create consistent and continuous force system)

    Attachment driven mechanics are not always effective, aligner Activation is more effective

    Graphy is the trending technology in aligner activation

  • Join me for a podcast summary looking at the grey topic oflower third molar management. The podcast explores the different guidelines of removal,factors for consideration for removal as well as the effect orthodontics canhave on third molar pathology. The lecture was given by Flavia Artese at thisyear’s British Orthodontic Conference in my city London.

    Flavia Artese began with asking the clincal question weface, what would you do with an impacted 3rd molar?

    Difference in international practice

    · UK NICE guidelines 2000: Surgical removal ofimpacted third molars should be limited to patients with evidence of pathology

    · AAOMS White paper USA 2016: currently or likelyto be non-functional associated with disease or at a high risk of developingdisease

    What factors in decision making

    1. Eruption path

    · Mandible = mesial, whereas Maxilla = distal

    o Rate of impaction Mandible 25%, maxilla 14%Worthington 2016

    2. Mechanism of tooth eruption – explained byFrazier-Bowers

    · A pathway created by the dental follicle

    o Triggers eruption of intraosseous eruption

    o Genetic control of cell differentiation indental follicle

    § Requires root elongation, vascular pressure andDL ise 2008

    Orthodontic influence = SPACE

    · Decrease with distal movement of posterior teeth

    o Distalisation, elastics

    § Kim 2014 = limit of lower molar distalisation

    § 35% of cases already have contact with lingualcortical plate

    · Increase through mesial movement

    o 80% of 3rd molars erupted in premolarextraction cases Kim 2003

    o Increase in retromolar area

    o 2nd molars – removal of guidance =unpredictable alignment of 3rd molars, tipped, therefore will likelyrequire orthodontic alignment Gooris 1990

    § Flavia suggested if 7s impacted, removal of 8sand 2nd molar uprighting, as no delay until full root development

    Prediction method

    · Mandibular morphology

    o Longer the mandible = greater chance of 3rdmolar eruption: Begtrub 2012

    · Retromolar space

    o OPG - size of crown and space available: If space greater then size of thetooth = 75% eruption, if less space available than the tooth size = 75% ofimpaction Olive

    Prediction of orthodontists and surgeons Bastos 2016

    · Orthodontists 38% extract

    · Surgeons 50% extract

    · Surgeons extract more

    o Surgical morbidly 10% Yamada 2022

    o Greater pathology: 82% when erupted, 74% in softtissue, bone 33%

    Surveillance protocol

    · No complaints from patients

    Fully erupted

    · No consensus of protocol pathology

    Review of guidelines Gadiwalla 2021

    Only 2guidelines were recommended , RCS and SIGN

    · Recommended guidelines

    Conclusion

    · Limited evidence

    · Orthodontists can influence the space

    · If second molars require extraction, willrequire time to erupt as well as

    · CBCT should be used for diagnosis

    · Refer to oral surgeon for assessment ofdifficulty in removal

    Please join Flavia Artese at the 2025 InternationalOrthodontic Conference in Rio De Janeiro

    Contributions

    Contents: AbdAllah Sharafeldin

    Contents edited andproduced: Farooq Ahmed

  • Join me for a podcast exploring the limits oforthodontic tooth movement. This podcast is a summary of two intriguinglectures, by Dr Yanqi Yang and Carlos Flores Mir from this year’s InternationalOrthodontic Symposium by the IOF. This podcast explore the anatomical andperiodontal boundaries of orthodontic tooth movement

    Anatomical boundary

    · Distalisation: Alveolar boundary lowermolar distalization

    · Horizontal: Atrophic ridge.

    · Vertical: Maxillary sinus

    boundary for lower molar distalization.

    o Coronal level: Anterior border ofmandibular ramus

    o Apex level: lingual plate

    o Variable – distance from secondmolar distal root and inner lingual cortex

    § Favourable Class 3 greater retromolarspace, class 2 least Fan 2022

    § Unfavourable High angle haveshorter distance Kim 2021, Victoria 2022

    Side effects of lower molar distalisation

    o Mainly tipping

    o Distalisation achieved at apicallevel approximately 1mm AJODO 2016

    o Lingual plate contact 1/3 of cases Kimet al 2014

    Horizontal movement: atrophic ridge

    · Change in width and height ofextraction site

    o Loss of 40-60% width and heightPagni 2012

    § Width 3.79mm Tao 2012

    § Height 1.24mm Tao 2012

    o Mostly within 6 months Schrepp 2003

    · Changes when orthodontic toothmovement into atrophic edentulous site

    o Increase bone height 2.2-5.2mm,duration 24 months Elif 2004

    o Increase in width 0.8-1.6mmStokland 2011

    o Greater height increase buccally,less lingually Dos Santos 2017

    · Side effects

    o Root resorption – lateral

    § 0.7mm

    o Dehiscence

    § Slight in all cases, thinning ofalveolar bone Patricia dos Santos 2017

    o Reduced bone height compared tonon-edentious area

    Vertical:

    · Maxillary sinus prevent toothmovement?

    o Increased tipping, slower rate of toothmovement

    · Side effects

    o Mild increase in RR

    o No difference in relapse, vitalityor periodontal differences

    o 6 buccal roots closest . (Qin et al2020)

    · Understanding

    o Maxillary sinus remodels itselfwith tooth movement

    o Increase in resistance to toothmovement, greater tipping.

    Periodontal boundaries

    Carlos Flores Mir started the topic with a thought provingquestion, that we are well aware of Proffit’s envelope of lower incisor dentalmovements; but the question of whatis the periodontal limit, is still yet to be clearly defined.

    The difference between the gingival biotype and phylotype,there has been a focus on biotype but it

    · Biotype – thickness of gingiva inbucco-lingual direction

    · Phenotype – contour gingiva,underlying bony architecture, and width of keratinised tissue

    Thin gingival biotypes are likely to have more chancesof recession.

    Factors to consider

    · Extraction Vs non-extraction: inboth scenario the bone height decreases, but in different locations, anteriorextraction treatment = 2mm reduction, non-extraction = 1.2mm. www.orthoinsummary.com/blog

    · Dehiscence exist pre treatment

    · Thicker the gingiva, the better Yared2006

    · Initial position of the toothdecides its periodontal future

    · Thickness varies in various areasof the mouth.

    · Oral hygiene major factor ofrecession Melsen 2005.

    CBCT

    · Aren’t really telling us the wholestory –

    · Size of the image of a CBCT islimited by the radiation dose, and typically is 0.3-0.6mm3 of voxel size

    · Tissue less than 0.6mm appears as aabsent in CBCT giving false positive results ( Redua 2020)

    Lower incisor proclination and recession:

    · Systematic review Kalina no correlationbetween proclination and gingival recession. (Kalina 2022)

    Understanding

    Recession = Thin gingiva + proclination +periodontitis

    Contents– Shanya Kapoor

    Editing and Production – Farooq Ahmed

  • Orthodontics In Interview: RICHARD COUSLEYDigital orthodontics, miniscrews and aligners“Aligner set ups need to be orthodontically checked to make sure it is realistic, and an accurate representation of what you are trying to achieve”Richard describes his journey into digital orthodontics, what led him to create his own successful miniscrew system, and why he has continued to innovate in orthodontic with 3D printing.Richard describes what he thinks stifles innovation in orthodontics, as well as how CBCTs have improved his miniscrew success rates. Please like and subscribe if you find it useful!To book Dr Richard Cousley’s 3D orthodontic course, please see: https://www.3dorthodonticscourse.com(no financial interest)#orthodontics #farooqahmed #richardcousley #aligners #digitalorthodontics #infinitas #miniscrews #orthodonticsinsummary#orthodonticsininterview Farooq Ahmed

  • Join me for a summary of two lectures from this year’s international orthodontic symposium (IOF), looking at mouth breathing and paediatric obstructive sleep apnoea, by Hong He and Carlos Flores Mir. The lectures explore this controversial area in both medicine and orthodontics and review the current understanding of the topic, the relationship with facial features and current recommendations for orthodontists.

    OSA is defined disruption to breathing American Academy of Sleep Medicine

    Adult > 5 apnoea/hour & 10 seconds

    Child apnoea for duration of 2 breaths 1

    Defining mouth breathing at airflow over 25% through the mouth

    Evidence of craniofacial effects

    Mouth breathing

    Retrusive maxilla -1.33o (SNA -2.03 -0.63)

    Retrusive mandible -1.4 (SNB -2.20—0.6) Zhang 2020 SR

    Increased mandibular angle 3.38o (2.77-3.98)

    But is mouth breathing pathological?

    pOSA

    no craniofacial difference in pOSA vs controls SR Fagundes 2022

    Recent study by Carlos Flores Mir, combine factors

    Demographics, lifestyle, craniofacial features and sleep features. Investigating effects of treatment on these categories

    Treatment

    Twinblock improves pOSA AHI 14.08 to 4.25 in the short term, severe to mild Zhang 2012

    MARPE increases cross sectional area, by 40% oropharynx, 7% nasopharynx Zhao 2020

    RME increases nasal airway volume initially of 1604 mm3, but reduce to 579mm3 after 3-5 months and non-significant SR Zhao 2021

    Tonsillectomy

    Does not stop mouth breathing, even if OSA resolved Bae 2020

    Conclusions

    Breathing involves complexity of 3D structures and fluid dynamics is not well understood

    Mouth breathing does seem to have craniofacial influence, however OSA does not

    Orthodontists role in OSA

    screening for OSA

    Refer to physician if risk factors present

    Refer adenoid hypertrophy to ENT

    Contributions

    Contents and video editing – Shanya Kapoor

    Editing and Production – Farooq Ahmed

  • Orthodontics In Interview GUEST HOST Björn Ludwig with Ralf Radlanski

    Guest podcast hosted by Dr Björn Ludwig, he interviews the anatomist andorthodontist Ralf Radlanski, he explores the career of the founder of the InternationalOrthodontics Symposium (IOS) and president of the EurAsian Association of Orthodontists.

    The two questions close to Bjorn’s heart are explored: do you drinkwine, and do you listen to music.

    YouTube

    https://youtu.be/vcAzjWa507Y

    #bjornjudwig

    #ralfradlanski

    #IOSmoselle23

    #orthodonticsinsummary

    #orthodonticsininterview

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bjoernludwig1

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bjorn.ludwig.961

    @bjoernludwig1

    @bjorn.ludwig.961

  • Orthodontics and the airway

    “Lots of patients are struggling with the symptoms (of obstructive sleep apnoea) when a little kid doesn't sleep it's not just the child's problem, their parents and other family member who also become sleep deprived”

    Audrey describes her motivation in the young field of dental sleep medicine, the role of orthodontics in the management of paediatric obstructive sleep apnoea, the patient’s orthodontic treatment is appropriate in managing OSA, as well as those patients it is inappropriate for. Audrey explains her thoughts on why the field of airways and orthodontics is controversial, and answers critical questions regarding orthodontics and sleep medicine.

    We get to hear of Audrey’s take on the AAO White paper on obstructive sleep apnoea.

    Click on the link below to view previous episodes, to refresh topics, pick up tricks and stay up to date.

    Please like and subscribe if you find it useful!

    Instagram: www.instagram.com/draudreyyoonhappycamper

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/audrey.yoon

    @audrey.yoon

    @draudreyyoonhappycamper

    Farooq Ahmed