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Correlation Between Sex and Facial Soft Tissue Characteristics Among Young Saudi Patients with Various Orthodontic Skeletal Malocclusions

BACKGROUND: There is a debate over the influence of sex on facial soft tissue physiognomies. Therefore, the present study used teleradiographs to assess and compare the soft tissue physiognomies between males and females in a sample from Saudi Arabia who have various orthodontic malocclusions. MATER...

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Autores principales: Ajwa, Nancy, Alkhars, Fatimah Ahmed, AlMubarak, Fasaiel Habeeb, Aldajani, Huda, AlAli, Noor Mahdi, Alhanabbi, Amani Habib, Alsulaiman, Sukaina Abdulladel, Divakar, Darshan Devang
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Scientific Literature, Inc. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7060508/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32101535
http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/MSM.919771
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author Ajwa, Nancy
Alkhars, Fatimah Ahmed
AlMubarak, Fasaiel Habeeb
Aldajani, Huda
AlAli, Noor Mahdi
Alhanabbi, Amani Habib
Alsulaiman, Sukaina Abdulladel
Divakar, Darshan Devang
author_facet Ajwa, Nancy
Alkhars, Fatimah Ahmed
AlMubarak, Fasaiel Habeeb
Aldajani, Huda
AlAli, Noor Mahdi
Alhanabbi, Amani Habib
Alsulaiman, Sukaina Abdulladel
Divakar, Darshan Devang
author_sort Ajwa, Nancy
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: There is a debate over the influence of sex on facial soft tissue physiognomies. Therefore, the present study used teleradiographs to assess and compare the soft tissue physiognomies between males and females in a sample from Saudi Arabia who have various orthodontic malocclusions. MATERIAL/METHODS: We obtained 221 lateral cephalometric radiographs taken from orthodontic clinics of patients ages 16–26 years (114 males and 107 females) living in the central and eastern regions of Saudi Arabia. OnyxCeph3TM digital software was used to analyze the dentoskeletal classification of the sample as class I (n=84), class II division 1 (n=42), class II division 2 (n=33), and class III (n=62). Burstone analysis of 6 linear measurements for facial soft tissue thickness (FSTT) was used. We used descriptive analysis and the independent-samples t test using SPSS version 25 for Windows (Chicago, IL) with p<0.05 set as the level of statistical significance. RESULTS: Male patients with a class I dento-skeletal relationship showed thicker FSTT; the most significant thickness was seen near the glabella, followed by the upper/lower lip and sub-labiomental sulcus areas. Male patients with class II division 1 showed a substantial difference in FSTT at subnasal, lower lip, and sub-labiomental sulcus areas. No significant difference in FSTT was found between males and females among class II division 2 and class III patients. CONCLUSIONS: These observations of significant changes in facial structures of Saudis between males and females should be of great help for diagnosis of orthodontic cases in Saudi adults.
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spelling pubmed-70605082020-03-16 Correlation Between Sex and Facial Soft Tissue Characteristics Among Young Saudi Patients with Various Orthodontic Skeletal Malocclusions Ajwa, Nancy Alkhars, Fatimah Ahmed AlMubarak, Fasaiel Habeeb Aldajani, Huda AlAli, Noor Mahdi Alhanabbi, Amani Habib Alsulaiman, Sukaina Abdulladel Divakar, Darshan Devang Med Sci Monit Clinical Research BACKGROUND: There is a debate over the influence of sex on facial soft tissue physiognomies. Therefore, the present study used teleradiographs to assess and compare the soft tissue physiognomies between males and females in a sample from Saudi Arabia who have various orthodontic malocclusions. MATERIAL/METHODS: We obtained 221 lateral cephalometric radiographs taken from orthodontic clinics of patients ages 16–26 years (114 males and 107 females) living in the central and eastern regions of Saudi Arabia. OnyxCeph3TM digital software was used to analyze the dentoskeletal classification of the sample as class I (n=84), class II division 1 (n=42), class II division 2 (n=33), and class III (n=62). Burstone analysis of 6 linear measurements for facial soft tissue thickness (FSTT) was used. We used descriptive analysis and the independent-samples t test using SPSS version 25 for Windows (Chicago, IL) with p<0.05 set as the level of statistical significance. RESULTS: Male patients with a class I dento-skeletal relationship showed thicker FSTT; the most significant thickness was seen near the glabella, followed by the upper/lower lip and sub-labiomental sulcus areas. Male patients with class II division 1 showed a substantial difference in FSTT at subnasal, lower lip, and sub-labiomental sulcus areas. No significant difference in FSTT was found between males and females among class II division 2 and class III patients. CONCLUSIONS: These observations of significant changes in facial structures of Saudis between males and females should be of great help for diagnosis of orthodontic cases in Saudi adults. International Scientific Literature, Inc. 2020-02-26 /pmc/articles/PMC7060508/ /pubmed/32101535 http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/MSM.919771 Text en © Med Sci Monit, 2020 This work is licensed under Creative Common Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) )
spellingShingle Clinical Research
Ajwa, Nancy
Alkhars, Fatimah Ahmed
AlMubarak, Fasaiel Habeeb
Aldajani, Huda
AlAli, Noor Mahdi
Alhanabbi, Amani Habib
Alsulaiman, Sukaina Abdulladel
Divakar, Darshan Devang
Correlation Between Sex and Facial Soft Tissue Characteristics Among Young Saudi Patients with Various Orthodontic Skeletal Malocclusions
title Correlation Between Sex and Facial Soft Tissue Characteristics Among Young Saudi Patients with Various Orthodontic Skeletal Malocclusions
title_full Correlation Between Sex and Facial Soft Tissue Characteristics Among Young Saudi Patients with Various Orthodontic Skeletal Malocclusions
title_fullStr Correlation Between Sex and Facial Soft Tissue Characteristics Among Young Saudi Patients with Various Orthodontic Skeletal Malocclusions
title_full_unstemmed Correlation Between Sex and Facial Soft Tissue Characteristics Among Young Saudi Patients with Various Orthodontic Skeletal Malocclusions
title_short Correlation Between Sex and Facial Soft Tissue Characteristics Among Young Saudi Patients with Various Orthodontic Skeletal Malocclusions
title_sort correlation between sex and facial soft tissue characteristics among young saudi patients with various orthodontic skeletal malocclusions
topic Clinical Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7060508/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32101535
http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/MSM.919771
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