Maxillofacial Orthognathics, Graduate School, Tokyo Medical and Dental University, Tokyo, Japan.
Eur J Orthod. 2011 Jun;33(3):243-9. doi: 10.1093/ejo/cjq060. Epub 2010 Sep 9.
Although it has been suggested that an imbalance in buccolingual pressure may play a role in dental compensation of the molars and asymmetry in the mandibular dental arch in subjects with facial asymmetry, it is still unclear whether buccolingual pressure is associated with this phenomenon. Thus, the purpose of this study was to test the null hypothesis that there are no differences in cheek and tongue pressure between the shifted and non-shifted sides in 12 (8 females and 4 males, mean age: 24.9 years) subjects with facial asymmetry defined as 4 mm or more deviation of the midline in the mandibular incisors. The resting buccolingual pressure on the bilateral mandibular first molars was measured simultaneously using four miniature pressure sensors. Moreover, a postero-anterior (PA) cephalogram was used to determine the buccolingual positions and the inclination of the mandibular first molars. Wilcoxon t-, Kruskal-Wallis H-, and Mann-Whitney U-tests and Spearman correlation coefficient by rank were used for statistical analysis. Significance was set at P < 0.05. Cheek pressure was significantly greater on the shifted than that on the non-shifted side, while tongue pressure on the shifted side was significantly less than that on the non-shifted side. On the other hand, tongue/cheek pressure ratio on the shifted side was significantly less than that on the non-shifted side. There were significant differences between the shifted and non-shifted sides in the buccolingual positions and inclination of the mandibular first molars. Regardless of the side, there were significant negative correlations between the buccolingual position of the mandibular first molars and cheek pressure and significant positive correlations between the buccolingual position of the mandibular first molars and tongue/cheek pressure ratio. There were also significant negative correlations between tongue/cheek pressure ratio and inclination of the mandibular first molars on both the shifted and the non-shifted sides. Thus, the present findings reject the null hypothesis. The imbalance in buccolingual pressure in subjects with facial asymmetry appears to be related to dental compensation of the molars and mandibular asymmetry.
尽管有人认为颊舌压力不平衡可能在面部不对称患者的磨牙牙代偿和下颌牙弓不对称中起作用,但颊舌压力是否与这种现象有关仍不清楚。因此,本研究的目的是检验以下零假设,即对于中线偏移 4 毫米或以上的 12 名(8 名女性和 4 名男性,平均年龄:24.9 岁)面部不对称患者,其颊侧和舌侧压力在移位侧和非移位侧之间没有差异。使用四个微型压力传感器同时测量双侧下颌第一磨牙的休息颊舌压力。此外,还使用后前(PA)头颅侧位片确定下颌第一磨牙的颊舌位置和倾斜度。使用 Wilcoxon t 检验、Kruskal-Wallis H 检验、Mann-Whitney U 检验和Spearman 秩相关系数进行统计分析。P < 0.05 为差异有统计学意义。移位侧的颊侧压力明显大于非移位侧,而移位侧的舌侧压力明显小于非移位侧。另一方面,移位侧的舌/颊压力比明显小于非移位侧。下颌第一磨牙的颊舌位置和倾斜度在移位侧和非移位侧之间存在显著差异。无论在哪一侧,下颌第一磨牙的颊舌位置与颊侧压力呈显著负相关,与舌/颊压力比呈显著正相关。舌/颊压力比与下颌第一磨牙的倾斜度也存在显著负相关,无论是在移位侧还是非移位侧。因此,本研究的结果否定了零假设。面部不对称患者颊舌压力的不平衡似乎与磨牙牙代偿和下颌不对称有关。