Preprint Article Version 1 Preserved in Portico This version is not peer-reviewed

Change in the Constricted Airway in Patients after Clear Aligner Treatment: Retrospective Study

Version 1 : Received: 29 July 2022 / Approved: 29 July 2022 / Online: 29 July 2022 (09:37:56 CEST)

A peer-reviewed article of this Preprint also exists.

Fountoulaki, G.; Thurzo, A. Change in the Constricted Airway in Patients after Clear Aligner Treatment: A Retrospective Study. Diagnostics 2022, 12, 2201. Fountoulaki, G.; Thurzo, A. Change in the Constricted Airway in Patients after Clear Aligner Treatment: A Retrospective Study. Diagnostics 2022, 12, 2201.

Abstract

This retrospective study evaluated changes in the pharyngeal portion of the upper airway in pa-tients with constricted and normal airway treated with clear aligners (Invisalign, Align). Additionally, the paper has assessed the change of tongue position in the oral cavity from lateral view. Evaluation was performed with specialized software (Invivo 6.0, Anatomage) on pre-treatment and posttreatment pairs of cone beam computed tomography imaging (CBCT) data. The level of airway constriction, volume, cross-section minimal area, and tongue profile were evaluated. Patients with malocclusion, with pair or initial and finishing CBCT and without sig-nificant weight change between the scans, treated with Invisalign clear aligners were distributed in two groups. Group A consisted of fifty-five patients with orthodontic malocclusion and con-stricted upper airway. Control group B consisted of thirty-one patients with orthodontic malocclusions without any airway constriction. In the group with airway constriction, there was a statistically significant increase in volume during therapy (p<0.001). The surface of the most con-stricted cross-section of airway did not change significantly after treatment in any of the groups. The airway constriction was most frequently localized at the level of 2nd cervical vertebra. The final tongue position was different from initial in 62.2% of all clear aligner treatments.

Keywords

orthodontics; airway; clear aligners; 3D diagnostics; sleep apnea; CBCT

Subject

Medicine and Pharmacology, Dentistry and Oral Surgery

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