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Prevalence of long face pattern in Brazilian individuals of different ethnic backgrounds

OBJECTIVE: The long face pattern is a facial deformity with increased anterior total facial height due to vertical excess of the lower facial third. Individuals with long face may present different degrees of severity in vertical excess, as well as malocclusions that are difficult to manage. The cat...

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Autores principales: CARDOSO, Mauricio de Almeida, de CASTRO, Renata Cristina Faria Ribeiro, LI AN, Tien, NORMANDO, David, GARIB, Daniela Gamba, CAPELOZZA FILHO, Leopoldino
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Faculdade de Odontologia de Bauru da Universidade de São Paulo 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3881865/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23739865
http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1678-7757201302270
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author CARDOSO, Mauricio de Almeida
de CASTRO, Renata Cristina Faria Ribeiro
LI AN, Tien
NORMANDO, David
GARIB, Daniela Gamba
CAPELOZZA FILHO, Leopoldino
author_facet CARDOSO, Mauricio de Almeida
de CASTRO, Renata Cristina Faria Ribeiro
LI AN, Tien
NORMANDO, David
GARIB, Daniela Gamba
CAPELOZZA FILHO, Leopoldino
author_sort CARDOSO, Mauricio de Almeida
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: The long face pattern is a facial deformity with increased anterior total facial height due to vertical excess of the lower facial third. Individuals with long face may present different degrees of severity in vertical excess, as well as malocclusions that are difficult to manage. The categorization of vertical excess is useful to determine the treatment prognosis. This survey assessed the distribution of ethnically different individuals with vertical excess according to three levels of severity and determined the prevalence of long face pattern. MATERIAL AND METHODS: The survey was comprised of 5,020 individuals of Brazilian ethnicity (2,480 females and 2,540 males) enrolled in middle schools in Bauru-SP, Brazil. The criterion for inclusion of individuals with vertically impaired facial relationships was based on lip incompetence, evaluated under natural light, in standing natural head position with the lips at rest. Once identified, the individuals were classified into three subtypes according to the severity: mild, moderate, and severe. Then the pooled sample was distributed according to ethnical background as White (Caucasoid), Black (African descent), Brown (mixed descent), Yellow (Asian descent) and Brazilian Indian (Brazilian native descent). The Chi-square (χ(2)) test was used (p<0.05) to compare the frequency ratios of individuals with vertically impaired facial relationships in the total sample and among different ethnicities, according to the three levels of severity. RESULTS: The severe subtype was rare, except in Black individuals (7.32%), who also presented the highest relative frequency (45.53%) of moderate subtype, followed by Brown individuals (43.40%). In the mild subtype, Yellow (68.08%) and White individuals (62.21%) showed similar and higher relative frequency values. CONCLUSIONS: Black individuals had greater prevalence of long face pattern, followed by Brown, White and Yellow individuals. The prevalence of long face pattern was 14.06% in which 13.39% and 0.68% belonged to moderate and severe subtypes, respectively.
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spelling pubmed-38818652014-01-08 Prevalence of long face pattern in Brazilian individuals of different ethnic backgrounds CARDOSO, Mauricio de Almeida de CASTRO, Renata Cristina Faria Ribeiro LI AN, Tien NORMANDO, David GARIB, Daniela Gamba CAPELOZZA FILHO, Leopoldino J Appl Oral Sci Original Articles OBJECTIVE: The long face pattern is a facial deformity with increased anterior total facial height due to vertical excess of the lower facial third. Individuals with long face may present different degrees of severity in vertical excess, as well as malocclusions that are difficult to manage. The categorization of vertical excess is useful to determine the treatment prognosis. This survey assessed the distribution of ethnically different individuals with vertical excess according to three levels of severity and determined the prevalence of long face pattern. MATERIAL AND METHODS: The survey was comprised of 5,020 individuals of Brazilian ethnicity (2,480 females and 2,540 males) enrolled in middle schools in Bauru-SP, Brazil. The criterion for inclusion of individuals with vertically impaired facial relationships was based on lip incompetence, evaluated under natural light, in standing natural head position with the lips at rest. Once identified, the individuals were classified into three subtypes according to the severity: mild, moderate, and severe. Then the pooled sample was distributed according to ethnical background as White (Caucasoid), Black (African descent), Brown (mixed descent), Yellow (Asian descent) and Brazilian Indian (Brazilian native descent). The Chi-square (χ(2)) test was used (p<0.05) to compare the frequency ratios of individuals with vertically impaired facial relationships in the total sample and among different ethnicities, according to the three levels of severity. RESULTS: The severe subtype was rare, except in Black individuals (7.32%), who also presented the highest relative frequency (45.53%) of moderate subtype, followed by Brown individuals (43.40%). In the mild subtype, Yellow (68.08%) and White individuals (62.21%) showed similar and higher relative frequency values. CONCLUSIONS: Black individuals had greater prevalence of long face pattern, followed by Brown, White and Yellow individuals. The prevalence of long face pattern was 14.06% in which 13.39% and 0.68% belonged to moderate and severe subtypes, respectively. Faculdade de Odontologia de Bauru da Universidade de São Paulo 2013 /pmc/articles/PMC3881865/ /pubmed/23739865 http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1678-7757201302270 Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Articles
CARDOSO, Mauricio de Almeida
de CASTRO, Renata Cristina Faria Ribeiro
LI AN, Tien
NORMANDO, David
GARIB, Daniela Gamba
CAPELOZZA FILHO, Leopoldino
Prevalence of long face pattern in Brazilian individuals of different ethnic backgrounds
title Prevalence of long face pattern in Brazilian individuals of different ethnic backgrounds
title_full Prevalence of long face pattern in Brazilian individuals of different ethnic backgrounds
title_fullStr Prevalence of long face pattern in Brazilian individuals of different ethnic backgrounds
title_full_unstemmed Prevalence of long face pattern in Brazilian individuals of different ethnic backgrounds
title_short Prevalence of long face pattern in Brazilian individuals of different ethnic backgrounds
title_sort prevalence of long face pattern in brazilian individuals of different ethnic backgrounds
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3881865/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23739865
http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1678-7757201302270
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