The Morphology of Impacted Maxillary Central Incisors: A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Search Strategy and Study Selection Criteria
2.2. Eligibility Criteria
2.3. Selection Process and Data Collection Process
2.4. Data Extraction
2.5. Quality Assessment
3. Results
3.1. Study Selection
3.2. Study Characteristics
3.3. Results of Individual Studies
3.4. Quality Assessment
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Inclusion Criteria | Exclusion Criteria |
---|---|
Randomized, prospective, and retrospective studies published in English | Literature reviews, case reports and series |
Patients diagnosed with unilateral impaction of maxillary central incisors | Bilateral impaction of maxillary central incisors |
CBCT images with radiological evaluation measurements of ICI before treatment | Panoramic or dental radiographs used for ICI evaluation |
Comparison between pre-treatment measurements of crown lengths, root lengths, root dilacerations (angle, position) of ICI and naturally erupted CCI | Studies on patients with genetic syndromes (craniofacial syndromes, cleft lip, or palate), severe facial malformations or systemic diseases |
Authors | Study Design | Study Sample: Patients (M/F); Mean Age (SD) at T0 | Comparison | Eligible Outcome |
---|---|---|---|---|
Rizzatto et al., 2017 [30] | RS | 26 (15/11) mean age 9.5 (SD not defined) years (range 7–14) ICI with angle of crown-root dilaceration beyond 60 degrees were excluded | ICI and CCI (T0) |
|
Shi et al., 2015 [31] | RS | 30 (20/10) mean age 8.44 (1.20) years (range 6.5–11.2) | ICI and CCI (T0) |
|
Sun et al., 2014 [32] | RS | 41 (19/22) mean age 8.69 (1.36) years (range not defined) Labial inversely ICI ICI groups: Early dental age group (n = 18); dental age 7.50 (0.51) Late dental age group (n = 22); dental age 9.55 (0.51) | ICI and CCI (T0) |
|
Lyu et al., 2018 [33] | RS | 108 (60/48) mean age 11.8 (2.6) years (range 8–16) ICI groups: Palatal impaction (n = 23); Labial impaction (n = 69); Nasal impaction (n = 16); Dilacerated 71 (65.7%); Non-dilacerated 37 (34.3%). | ICI and CCI (T0) |
|
Authors | Crown Length (mm), mean (SD) | Root Length (mm), mean (SD) | Dilaceration (Incidence, Position (mm), Angle (°)) | Conclusions |
---|---|---|---|---|
Rizzatto et al., 2017 [30] | ICI 10.02 (1.31) CCI 10.58 (1.08) | ICI 9.21 (1.70) CCI 12.42 (1.53) | Not evaluated | Crown and root lengths were statistically shorter (0.56 mm and 3.22 mm, respectively) in ICI when compared to CCI (p < 0.001). Crown length of ICI was shorter in 80 % of the sample. Root length of ICI was shorter in 96 % of the sample. |
Shi et al., 2015 [31] | Not evaluated | ICI 6.67 (1.94) CCI 9.02 (2.13) | Not evaluated | The mean pretreatment root length of ICI was statistically shorter by 2.35 mm than root length of CCI (p < 0.001). |
Sun et al., 2014 [32] | ICI (early dental age group) 11.08 (1.02) CCI (early dental age group) 11.29 (0.86) ICI (late dental age group) 10.90 (0.66) CCI (late dental age group) 11.05 (0.95) | ICI (early dental age group) 5.47 (1.35) CCI (early dental age group) 7.60 (1.53) ICI (late dental age group) 7.63 (2.00) CCI (late dental age group) 10.42 (1.95) | Dilaceration frequency: early dental age group 50% late dental age group 95.5% Dilaceration position: CEJ 25% Cervical third of root 32.5% Middle third of root 12.5% Apical third of root 5% Dilaceration angle: early dental age group 142.43° (39.25) late dental age group 109.68° (26.03) | The crown lengths of ICI in early and late dental age groups were significantly shorter compared to CCI by 0.21 mm and 0.15 mm, respectively. The root lengths of ICI were considerably shorter than those of CCI in both the early and late dental age groups by 2.13 mm and 2.79 mm, respectively (p < 0.05). Incidence of dilacerations was higher in the late dental age group compared with the early dental age group (p < 0.001). The cervical third of the root indicated a statistically higher occurrence of dilacerations than other portions of the root. A significantly higher dilaceration angle was observed in early dental age group than in late dental age group by 32.75°. |
Lyu et al., 2018 [33] | ICI (dilacerated group) 10.48 (0.38) ICI (non-dilacerated group) 10.49 (0.42) CCI 10.51 (0.23) | Not evaluated | Dilaceration frequency: Palatal impaction: 16.7% Labial impaction: 42.6% Nasal impaction: 6.4% Dilaceration position D (mm): Palatal impaction: 2.13 (0.32) Labial impaction: 4.33 (0.45) Nasal impaction: 9.80 (1.29) Dilaceration angle: Palatal impaction: 88.47° (6.28) Labial impaction: 112.46° (9.67) Nasal impaction: 59.83° (7.27) | There was no notable difference between crown lengths of dilacerated, non-dilacerated ICI and CCI. 65.7% of ICI had dilacerations greater than 20°. A significant reduction in root growth was observed in both the dilacerated and non-dilacerated ICI compared with CCI (p < 0.001). The dilacerations were the most incidence in labially impacted incisors. |
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Mockutė, G.; Klimaitė, G.; Smailienė, D. The Morphology of Impacted Maxillary Central Incisors: A Systematic Review. Medicina 2022, 58, 462. https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina58040462
Mockutė G, Klimaitė G, Smailienė D. The Morphology of Impacted Maxillary Central Incisors: A Systematic Review. Medicina. 2022; 58(4):462. https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina58040462
Chicago/Turabian StyleMockutė, Guoda, Gustė Klimaitė, and Dalia Smailienė. 2022. "The Morphology of Impacted Maxillary Central Incisors: A Systematic Review" Medicina 58, no. 4: 462. https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina58040462