Review suggests twin-block appliance produces changes- but are they clinically important?

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Fixed and removable functional appliances are used in the management of class II malocclusions. The Twin-block consists of upper and lower acrylic bite blocks with occlusal inclined planes that interlock at a 70 degree angle and guide the mandible forward and downward. It is considered that the twin-block is better tolerated by patients. The aim of this review was to evaluate short-term dental, skeletal, and soft tis- sue effects of treatment with Twin-block appliance in comparison to an untreated sample among individuals with a mild-to-moderate Class II division 1 malocclusion.

Searches were conducted in Medline, PubMed, Embase, the Cochrane Library and the Web of Science. Human cephalometric studies with a comparable control group of untreated subjects that used a Twin-block appliance in a non-extraction and non-surgical approach were considered. Study selection and data abstraction was carried out independently by two reviewers. Risk of bias was assessed.

  • 10 studies were included, 6 prospective controlled clinical trials and 4 retrospective controlled clinical studies.
  • 4 studies were considered to be a low risk of bias, 5 medium risk and one at high risk.
  • Twin-block treatment duration ranged 8 to 16 months
  • Proclination of lower incisors, retroclination of upper incisors, distal movement of upper molars and/or mesial movement of lower molars, increase in mandibular length, and/or forward movement of the mandible were consistently reported.
  • Clinically significant restraint of maxillary growth was not found.
  • Although the mandibular body length is increased, the facial impact of it is reduced by the simultaneous increment of the face height.
  • Changes of lower face height and occlusal plane inclination varied, suggesting that vertical dimension can be manipulated in patients who would benefit from lower molar extrusion.
  • There was not enough evidence to suggest clear lip position changes.

The authors concluded

Changes associated with a Class II correction were identified. Most of the changes individually were of limited clinical significance, but when combined reached clinical importance. No long-term changes were available.

Comment

Both pro- and retrospective studies are included in this review and retrospective studies have greater potential for bias, which needs to be taken into consideration when looking at the findings. In the discussion the authors highlight that one of the largest studies (assessed as being at low risk of bias) was one of the few that did not find any significant skeletal changes. This review only considered short-term changes. A broader Cochrane review looking at orthodontic treatment for class II malocclusions was recently published (Thiruvenkatachari et al 2013) . That review included 17 randomised controlled trials and suggested that minor beneficial changes in skeletal patterns were seen with functional appliances but they were not clinically significant.  An earlier review by Marsico et al (Dental Elf 20th July 2011) also identified small beneficial changes in skeletal patterns that were not clinically important.

Links

Ehsani S, Nebbe B, Normando D, Lagravere MO, Flores-Mir C. Short-term treatment effects produced by the Twin-block appliance: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Eur J Orthod. 2014 Jul 22. pii: cju030. [Epub ahead of print] Review. PubMed PMID: 25052373

Thiruvenkatachari B, Harrison JE, Worthington HV, O’Brien KD. Orthodontic treatment for prominent upper front teeth (Class II malocclusion) in children. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2013, Issue 11. Art. No.: CD003452. DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD003452.pub3.

Dental Elf 7th Jan 2014- Early orthodontic treatment may reduce incisal trauma in children with class II malocclusions

Dental Elf- 20th July 2011 – Functional orthodontic appliance treatment provides small beneficial changes in skeletal patterns

 

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