biology of tooth movement - srmdentalcollege.ac.in

Post on 27-Feb-2022

8 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

TRANSCRIPT

BIOLOGY OF TOOTH MOVEMENT

-DR.SUVETHA. S

Senior lecturer,

Department of orthodontics,

SRM Dental college, Ramapuram.

Compression of PDL at Pressure

site

Stretching of PDL at

Tension site

BONE REMODELLING/ ORTHODONTIC

TOOTH MOVEMENT

Changes in tooth

position during

mastication

Tooth eruption

Migration or drift of tooth

PHYSIOLOGIC TOOTH MOVEMENT

What is physiologic tooth movement?!!!

TOOTH ERUPTION

Blood pressure theory

Hammock

Ligament

Periodontal ligament traction

Root growth

What is tooth eruption ???

The axial movement of the tooth from its developmental position in the jaw to its final

position in oral cavity

Migration or drift of teeth

Mandibular dentition

Mesial/ Distal Occlusal

Maxillary dentition

Mesial and occlusal

Tooth movement during mastication

MASTICATION

Intermittent heavy force for 1 sec

(Range: 1 to 50 kgs)

Fluid is incompressable

Bending of alveolar bone

Sustained heavy force

Pain and displacement of teeth

Histology of orthodontic tooth movement

Frontal resorption

Undermining resorption

Secondary bone remodeling

Optimum orthodontic force

Clinically

Rapid tooth movement & no tooth mobility

No patient discomfort

LAG phase of tooth movement is minimal

Histologically

Vitality maintained

Maximum cellular response

Direct or frontal resorption

Oppenheim & Schwartz – 20-26gm/ Sq.cm

Hyalinization

EliminationGradual shrinkage of PDL fibers

Pycnotic nuclei

Compressed fibers combine to form cell

free mass

Changes in ground substance

Spillage of capillary contents

Osteoclasts in bone marrow and inner bone

surface within 20-30hrs

Clear, eosinophilic and homogenous substanceHyalinization in PDL is reversible !!!

Invasion of cells and blood vessels

Osteoclasts formed in the peripheral intact tissue

Hyalinization during different tooth movements

Controlled tippingUn-controlled tipping

Bodily movement

Phases of tooth movement

BURSTONE

Theories of orthodontic tooth movement

• Pressure- tension theory: Oppenheim & Schwarz

• Fluid dynamic theory: Bien

Vascular stenosis Aneurysm

Bone bending and piezo-electric theory: Farrar

Bone deposition and resorption

Osteoid

Bundle bone

Lamellar bone

DecalcificationOrganic acids

Degradation of matrix

Transport of soluble products to extracellular fluid or blood vascular system

Cathepsin B-1 (lysosomal acid protease)

Orthodontic Force Tranduction

First messengers

(Hormones, Prostagladins,

neurotrasmitters)

Second messengers

(cyclic AMP, GMP and calcium )

Bone remodeling/ Orthodontic tooth

movement

Biochemical reaction to orthodontic tooth movement

top related