This study evaluated a new treatment approach for skeletal open bite in growing individuals using an open bite activator combined with anterior skeletal anchorage-supported vertical elastics. An open bite is a condition where the front teeth don't touch when the back teeth are closed together, creating a gap. Traditional treatments often use extraoral appliances (devices worn outside the mouth), which can be uncomfortable and aesthetically unappealing, leading to poor patient compliance. We included 24 growing patients (14 females, 10 males) aged 12-14 years with skeletal open bite. All participants received an open bite activator (a removable functional appliance) and mini-screws placed between the upper and lower lateral and canine teeth. Vertical elastics were connected between these mini-screws, applying 150g of force for 20-22 hours daily over 12 months. Lateral cephalometric radiographs (specialized X-rays) were taken before treatment and after 12 months to evaluate changes in facial bone structure and tooth positions. Our results showed successful correction of open bite with an average increase in overbite of 3.35mm. We observed favorable skeletal changes including clockwise rotation of the maxilla (upper jaw), counterclockwise rotation of the mandible (lower jaw), and decreased vertical facial dimensions. This treatment approach offers a viable alternative to conventional methods that rely on extraoral appliances, potentially improving patient comfort and compliance. The protocol successfully addresses both skeletal and dental components of open bite malocclusion in growing patients.
Detailed Description This prospective interventional study aimed to develop and evaluate a novel treatment protocol for skeletal open bite that eliminates the need for extraoral appliances while achieving comparable therapeutic outcomes. Skeletal open bite represents a challenging orthodontic condition characterized by increased vertical facial dimensions, divergent skeletal planes, and negative overbite. Our treatment protocol combined two therapeutic approaches: (1) a modified open bite activator constructed with 3-4mm addition to the freeway space and relief in the anterior region, and (2) skeletal anchorage using mini-screws placed in the anterior region between lateral and canine teeth in both arches, connected by vertical intermaxillary elastics. The open bite activator component functioned through multiple mechanisms: acting as a posterior bite block to inhibit posterior dentoalveolar eruption, serving as a tongue barrier to prevent tongue thrust between anterior teeth, and directing masticatory forces to the posterior segments. The anterior relief in the appliance allowed for uninhibited eruption of incisors. The vertical elastics between mini-screws provided controlled force (150g) to facilitate favorable rotational movements of the maxilla and mandible. Cephalometric analyses included comprehensive skeletal angular measurements (SNA, SNB, ANB, Y Axis, SN/PP, GoGn/SN, PP/MP, gonial angle), skeletal linear measurements (N-Me, ANS-Me, Co-Go, S-Go), skeletal proportional measurements (Jarabak ratio), dentoalveolar angular measurements (U1-PP, interincisal angle, IMPA), and dentoalveolar linear measurements (overjet, overbite, U1-PP, U6-PP, L1-MP, L6-MP). This treatment protocol demonstrates the potential to achieve effects similar to traditional approaches using posterior high-pull headgear and vertical chin cup, without compromising treatment outcomes. The significance of this approach lies in its ability to address a primary challenge in orthodontic treatment of growing patients with skeletal open bite: patient compliance and comfort, which often determines treatment success.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
24
Participants received a removable open bite activator constructed with the mandible opened beyond the freeway space and combined with vertical intermaxillary elastics applying 150g of force, supported by mini-screws placed between the lateral and canine teeth in both the maxilla and mandible. The appliance was worn 20-22 hours daily for 12 months. This approach aimed to treat skeletal open bite without using extraoral appliances by promoting anterior mandibular rotation and inhibiting posterior vertical dentoalveolar development.
Ankara University
Ankara, Çankaya, Turkey (Türkiye)
Change in GoGn/SN Angle (Mandibular Plane Angle) from Baseline to 12 Months
This outcome assesses the change in the mandibular plane angle (GoGn/SN) using lateral cephalometric radiographs taken at the beginning of treatment (T0) and after 12 months of therapy (T1). A decrease in the GoGn/SN angle indicates counterclockwise rotation of the mandible, which is a favorable skeletal change in the treatment of skeletal open bite. Measurements were performed using standardized digital cephalometric analysis software (Dolphin Imaging 11.95).
Time frame: Baseline to 12 months post-treatment
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