xbow® blended two phase - aao duncan... · joss-vassalli i, grebenstein c, topouzelis n, sculean...
TRANSCRIPT
2016-04-18
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Xbow® Blended Two Phase“The Other Way To Use
Class II Springs”
Duncan W. Higgins DDS MSD FRCD(C)
Conflict of Interest Declaration
I receive royalties from orthodontic labs that are licensed to fabricate the
appliance discussed in this presentation.
Xbow® (Crossbow) Class II CorrectorUS Patent No. 6,168,430 B1
Canadian Patent No. 2,392,021
Maxillary Expansion
• Cornerstone of Class II treatment
• Hyrax RME is the backbone of Xbow
Triple “L” Arch® (Lower Labial Lingual)
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Xbow (Crossbow)
• Cross or hybrid appliance
• Lower labial and lingual bow
Two Phase Motto
Only place full edgewise appliances on Class I’s…
with adequate maxillary width.
IPR
Bite Turbo/Class II
elasticsIndirect Precision
BondingXbow, Secondary
(Compensatory) Maxillary Expansion
Maxillary Incisor and Canine Alignment: RME X 6
Primary Maxillary Expansion
Airway, Nasal Breathing, Palatal Tongue Posture
Xbow Two Phase Treatment
Eruption Based Treatment Sequencing
Early Expansion andClass II Correction U7-12-13 yr
L7-11-13 yr
L4-10-12 yr
U3-11-12 yrU4-10-11 yr
Xbow’s Target:
Class I first bicuspid bilaterally in phase one
Pancherz H. AM J ORTHOD. 1982;82:104-113
6+6+12=Blended Two Phase
• 4-6 months Class II springs on Xbow
• 1 month compensatory maxillary expansion + 5 months retention = 6 months
• During expansion retention we test the Class II correction.
• Replace springs on one or both sides, if necessary
• 12 months phase two.
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2 months exp/align
RME X 6
Xbow + RME X 6
6 months
Why bother with an extra appliance when I can do everything with a full
edgewise appliance?
Does two phase treatment really shorten the time in a full edgewise
appliance?
Incisor inclination
changes produced by
two compliance-free
Class II correction
protocols for the
treatment of mild to
moderate Class II
malocclusions.
Miller et al.Angle Orthod 2013
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Two Phase Xbow (XB) vs
Single Phase Forsus™ to the Arch Wire (FO)
Conclusions
• The Xbow protocol averaged 6 fewer months of overall treatment and 10 fewer months of fixed edgewise appliances compared to the Forsus protocol. (26.75 months FO group vs 16.68 months in the XB group)
• No differences in incisor inclination between treatment protocols were identified.
• Lower incisors proclined more the longer the treatment.
How can single phase treatment take longer than two phase?
• Dealing with the Class II spring side effects late in treatment?
RME X 6/Xbow Isolate the anterior teeth from the side effects of the Class II springs.
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Allow rebound and settling of the side effects before phase two
Ceph Studies
• University of Alberta
• Carlos Flores-Mir
Ceph Studies
• Flores-Mir C, Barnett G, Higgins DW, Heo G, Major PW. Short-term skeletal and dental effects the Xbow appliance as measured on lateral cephalograms. Am J Ortho DentofacialOrthop. 2009; 136: 822-32. doi:10.1016/j.ajodo.2008.01.021.
• http://www.ajodo.org/article/S0889-5406(09)00874-9/abstract
Ceph Studies (2)
• Flores-Mir C, Young A, Greiss A, Woynoroski M, Peng J. Lower Incisor inclination changes during Xbow treatment according to vertical facial type. Angle Orthod. 2010; 80: 1075-80. doi: 10.2319/033110-180.1.
• http://www.angle.org/doi/pdf/10.2319/033110-180.1
Ceph Studies (3)
• Aziz T, Nassar U, Flores-Mir C. Prediction of lower incisor proclination during Xbowtreatment based on initial cephalometric variables. Angle Othod 2012; 82: 472-9. doi: 10.2319/072311-465.1.
• http://www.angle.org/doi/pdf/10.2319/072311-465.1
Ceph Studies (4)
• Flores-Mir C, McGrath L, Heo G, Major PW. Efficiency of Molar Distalization with the XBowAppliance Related to Second Molar Eruption Stage. Eur J Orthod 2013; 35: 745-751. doi: 10.10
• http://ejo.oxfordjournals.org/content/35/6/745
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Ceph Studies (5)
• Tieu L, Normando D, Toogood R, Flores-Mir C. External Apical Root Resorption generated by Forsus simultaneously with brackets vs. Xbow followed by brackets to correct Class II malocclusions. J World Fed Orthod 2015; 4: 120-3. doi: 10.1016/j.ejwf.2015.07.001.93/ejo/cjs090.
• http://www.jwfo.org/article/S2212-4438(15)00029-6/abstract
Ceph Studies (6)
• Ehsani S, Normando D, Nebbe M, LagravereM, Flores-Mir C. Comparison of dental and skeletal changes in mild to moderate Class II malocclusions treated by either a Twin-Block or a Xbow appliance followed by full fixed orthodontic treatment. Angle Orthod 2015, Nov;85(6):997-1002. doi: 10.2319/092814-696.1
• http://www.angle.org/doi/pdf/10.2319/092814-696.1
Ceph Studies (7)
• Miller R, Tieu L, Flores-Mir C. Incisor inclination changes produced by two compliance-free Class II correction protocols for the treatment of mild to moderate Class II malocclusions. Angle Orthod. 2013; 83: 431-6. doi: 10.2319/062712-528.1.
• http://www.angle.org/doi/pdf/10.2319/062712-528.1
Lower Incisor Inclination during Class II Malocclusion Treatment
with the Xbow Appliance followed by Fixed Appliances
Fern Leavens (4th year dental student)
Summer Research Project (2015)
Under the supervision of Dr. Flores-Mir
Unpublished
• 172 consecutively treated patients
• T1-T2 = phase one Xbow, T2-T3 = phase two full edgewise
• The mean lower incisor inclination changed from T1 (99.1o) to T2(102.2o), with a mean difference of 3.1o. The change is statistically significant (p<0.001).
• The mean lower incisor inclination changed from T2 (102.2o) to T3(103.7o), with a mean difference of 1.5o. The change is statistically significant (p=0.01). This may not be clinically significant.
• The mean lower incisor inclination changed from T1 (99.1o) to T3(103.7o), with a mean difference of 4.6o. The change is statistically significant (p<0.001).
Prediction Equation for Lower Incisor Inclination Based on
Initial Overbite
• Prediction equation is L1IncDiffT3T1 = -2.2 + 1.3(OB). Or for every extra mm of OB (greater than ideal overbite of 2mm) there is an increase in lower incisor inclination of 1.3o
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Is there any rationale for proclininglower incisors 4.6 degrees?
Dental and Skeletal Variation Within the Range of Normal
JOHN S. CASKO, WALTER B. SHEPHERD
The Angle Orthodontist: 1984, Vol. 54, No. 1, pp. 5–17.
Untreated Class II and Class III Skeletal Samplewith Ideal Occlusion
(Naturally Compensated)
Does orthodontic proclination of lower incisors in children and adolescents cause gingival recession?
S Ruf, K Hansen, H Pancherz
“No interrelation was found between the amount of incisor proclinationand the development of gingival recession.”
“This phenomenon may have been due to the fact that an approximately 80% spontaneous reversal of the incisor proclination
after Herbst treatment occurs.”
July 1998 • Volume 114 • Number 1
Orthodontic therapy and gingival recession: a systematic review
Joss-Vassalli I, Grebenstein C, Topouzelis N, Sculean A, Katsaros C
The amount of recession found in studies with statistically significant differences between proclined
and non-proclined incisors is small and the clinical consequence questionable.
Orthod Craniofac Res 2010;13:127–141
Immediate Skeletal and Dentoalveolar Effects of the
Crown- or Banded Type HerbstAppliance on Class II division 1
MalocclusionA Systematic Review
Barnett et al.Angle Orthod 2008
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Measurement
de Almeida
2005
Pancherz
1982
SDJ
Pancherz
1982
AJO
Current
Xbow Study
(EMMs)
Md Angulations
NSL/ML (MP-SN) (degrees)0.4 0.2 1.0
L1 Angulation
IMPA (degrees)4 3.8
L1-NB (degrees)5.4
L1 Sagittal
L1-NB (mm)1.0
OLperp – L1 minus OLperp - Pg
(mm)1.8 1.2
L6 Sagittal
OLperp – L6 minus OLperp - Pg
(mm)1.0 0.6
The analysis of the effect of treatment with functional appliances vs an untreated control group showed that skeletal changes were statistically significant, but unlikely to be clinically significant. (Am J Orthod Dentofacial Orthop 2011;139:24-36)
My Nullish Hypothesis
The results are similar for all inter-arch Class II appliances. The differences are probably not
clinically significant.
http://www.crossboworthodontic.com