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Three-Dimensional Finite Element Analysis of Maxillary Protraction Using Diverse Modes of Rapid Palatal Expansion

Introduction:Three-dimensional finite elemental analysis (FEA) is a contemporary research instrument for the numeric simulation of a real physical system’s mechanical process. FEA can be used as a very effective tool to analyze and compare various aspects of rapid palatal expanders and to determine...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Balakrishnan, Rajkumar, Sengottuvel, Nagalakshmi, Altaf, Syed Khalid, Bhandari, Pawan Kumar, Kumaragurubaran, Preethi, Antony, Marshal
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10108977/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37077604
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.36328
Descripción
Sumario:Introduction:Three-dimensional finite elemental analysis (FEA) is a contemporary research instrument for the numeric simulation of a real physical system’s mechanical process. FEA can be used as a very effective tool to analyze and compare various aspects of rapid palatal expanders and to determine the stress distribution in maxillofacial bones and displacement and the biomechanical effects it has on the circummaxillary sutures. This study evaluates the effects of different modes of rapid palatal expansion on maxillary protraction as a treatment modality in skeletal Class III malocclusion by determining the stress and displacement along the circummaxillary sutures using the FEA. Materials and methods: Initially, a three-dimensional finite element simulation of the maxillofacial skeleton and sutures was obtained by Mimics software (Leuven, Belgium) from the cone-beam computed tomography (Dentsply Sirona, USA) images of a 30-year-old adult with normal occlusion. A geometrical preparation of the three expansion appliances, (A) hybrid MARPE (miniscrew-assisted rapid palatal expander) appliance (Fav anchor, India), (B) tooth-borne HYRAX (hygenic rapid expander) appliance (Welcare orthodontics, Kerela), and (C) bone-borne modified MARPE appliance (Biomaterials, Korea), was transferred to ANSYS WORKBENCH, 2020 R1 software (ANSYS, Inc., USA), and three finite element models with each appliance were prepared. A protraction force of 500g was applied to the occlusal plane that is directed 20 degrees inferiorly. The tensile stress, compressive stress, and the amount of displacement on the circummaxillary sutures were assessed and compared in all the three appliances. Young’s modulus (kg/mm(2)) and Poisson’s ratio (V) were used to calculate the stress and displacement in sutures adjacent to the maxilla in different aspects. Results: On analyzing the stress distribution, the tensile stress was found to be maximum in the medial aspect of the frontomaxillary suture of the bone-borne modified MARPE appliance (C), and the minimum tensile stress was found in the lateral aspect of the sphenozygomatic suture in hybrid MARPE (A). Again, the compressive stress distribution was found to be maximum in the medial aspect of the frontomaxillary suture in all three simulations and the minimum compressive stress in the superior aspect of the internasal suture in hybrid MARPE (A) along with the frontonasal suture at its medial aspect for tooth-borne HYRAX (B) and bone-borne modified MARPE (C). Displacement of the maxilla in all the planes was observed to be the largest for the bone-borne modified MARPE (C) appliance. On the contrary, the minimum displacement was found in the tooth-borne HYRAX (B) appliance.  Conclusion: The findings reveal that all three modes of rapid palatal expanders produced stress and displacement along the circummaxillary sutures on the application of protraction force with bone-borne modified MARPE being more effective in treating posterior crossbites thereby correcting the skeletal Class III malocclusions successfully.