Patients who sustain a fracture of the lower jaw are typically treated by wiring the teeth together or using small titanium plates and screws to fix the fracture. With either technique the upper and lower teeth are held together to ensure that the fracture is held in the correct position during healing (for closed reduction) or while the plate and screws are applied (for open reduction). The teeth can be held together using Erich arch bars which are a type of braces that are temporarily wired to the existing teeth. These stay in place for 6 weeks until the fracture has healed even though the patient is able to open his mouth immediately after the surgery is complete. The alternative to the traditional Erich arch bars is a relatively new type of arch bar (Stryker Hybrid) that is screwed to the jaw bone rather than wired to the teeth. The purpose of this study is to compare the two types of arch bars in terms of the speed with which they can be applied as well as any difference in fracture healing
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
50
Place Hybrid arch bars
Control group is Erich arch bars
Grady Memorial Hospital
Atlanta, Georgia, United States
Time to Place Archbars
Time taken to place archbars
Time frame: During initial admission and surgery
Number of Participants With Fracture Healing at 6 Weeks
Radiographic healing
Time frame: 6 weeks
Number of Participants With Complications Including Loosening of Archbars, Loosening of MMF, or Damage to Adjacent Teeth and Structures
assess operative and post-operative complications to include loosening of archbars, loosening of MMF if stratified to closed reduction and damage to adjacent teeth and structures
Time frame: up to 6 weeks post operatively
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