Orthodontic Treatment of Impacted Teeth. Adrian Becker

Orthodontic Treatment of Impacted Teeth - Adrian Becker


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mouth, preferably using the bisecting angle technique, placing it against the palatal aspect of the area where the tooth would normally be situated. The X‐ray tube is directed at right angles (ortho‐radial) to the tangent to the line of the arch at this point, as for any periapical view, and at the appropriate angle to the horizontal plane for the tooth in question (50° for the central incisor, etc.).

      2 A second receptor is placed in the mouth in the identical position but, on this occasion, the X‐ray tube is shifted (rotated) mesially or distally round the arch, although held at the same angle to the horizontal plane and directed at the mesially or distally adjacent tooth. To achieve this, the tube should describe an arc of between 30° and 45° of a circle whose centre is somewhere in the middle of the palate.

      There should be no problem identifying which of the two radiographs is the ortho‐radial view and which was taken from the distally deviated aspect, simply by comparing the relative distortion of the erupted teeth on the two radiographs. However, by radiographically ‘labelling’ the deviated receptor with the placement of a paper clip in one corner or by using a different receptor size for the deviated view, such as an occlusal‐sized receptor, this distinction will be simplified.

      Let us assume that a right unerupted canine is palatally placed (Figure 4.5), so that this tooth will be close to the middle of the picture obtained in both radiographs. In the first picture (direction B), where the tube is directed over the designated canine area of the ridge, the lateral incisor root will be on the right of the picture. If the canine is also mesially displaced, there will be some overlap of the canine crown and the lateral incisor root. On the second picture, taken from the front (direction A), the right lateral incisor root and the crown of the palatal canine will be in the middle of the picture, superimposed on one another, to a much greater degree.

Photos depict the left periapical view, oriented for the central incisors, shows the crown of the canine superimposed on the distal half of the central incisor root. Schematic illustration of the parallax method.

      Source: Reproduced from previous edition. Adrian Becker, The Orthodontic Treatment of Impacted Teeth, 2nd ed., 2007 with the kind permission of Informa Healthcare – Books.

      This parallax method has its limitations, although it is very useful in cases where there is a minimal height discrepancy between the erupted and unerupted adjacent teeth. However, when the canine is high and the periapical view shows no superimposition of the canine over the roots of the erupted teeth, or where the superimposition is only in the apical area, then the overall picture may be very misleading. Accordingly, a different method of localization should be used, as follows: the periapical view is directed from above the occlusal plane and in an oblique downward and medial direction, which distances the palatal canine from the roots of the other teeth and makes it appear higher than the anatomy of the maxilla would allow. While it may prove useful in locating the position of the crown of the impacted tooth, it is not adequate to the task of accurately placing the root apex and thereby defining the orientation of its long axis. These are important parameters when assessing treatment difficulty and prognosis during the treatment planning stage and are absolutely critical for the successful resolution of an impacted tooth, as we shall see in the following chapters.

      Unfortunately, the parallax method in general offers a relatively low degree of reliability. In a study to evaluate the usefulness of its two variants [6], six experienced orthodontists were given the case records of 39 patients with ectopic canines. The cases were evaluated twice, once using radiographs that showed vertical parallax and once with radiographs that featured horizontal parallax, although the parallax pairs were not revealed to the examiners as being of the same individual. In 83% of cases the correct positional diagnosis was made with the horizontal method, while only 68% of cases were correctly diagnosed with the vertical method. These results expose the method as being too crude, or the experts insufficiently discerning, for it to be relied upon with any degree of confidence. Thus, while often useful to obtain an initial overall impression, the method should certainly be backed up by more reliable diagnostic radiographic methods before a final treatment plan is presented to the patient.

      In the incisor region, an unerupted permanent incisor may be associated with one or two supernumerary teeth (mesiodentes). The parallax method is insufficiently clear in these cases due to the presence of two or three hard tissue entities in the bone, superimposed on the outline of the roots of the deciduous teeth and at varying heights in the alveolus.

      By contrast, the direction of the central ray in an anterior occlusal view (60–65°) or periapical view (50–55°) is angulated much more steeply to the receptor. These will both show superimposition of an ectopic tooth over the tooth in the line of the arch, but it is the degree of vertical discrepancy between these radiographs and the panoramic view that will reveal the position of the displaced tooth.

      The same panoramic view, with the X‐ray beam hitting this area when the cone is at the back of the patient’s head, will project the anterior midline area in its postero‐anterior aspect. The canine and premolar regions will be projected from an increasingly angulated viewpoint, as the X‐ray cone moves from the back to the side of the head. The molar and retromolar areas will be projected from the side, on the same revolving receptor, as a consequence


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