Panoramic Assessment of the Effect of Dental Status on the Articular Eminence Inclination

سال انتشار: 1404
نوع سند: مقاله ژورنالی
زبان: انگلیسی
مشاهده: 30

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شناسه ملی سند علمی:

JR_AJDR-17-4_003

تاریخ نمایه سازی: 30 بهمن 1404

چکیده مقاله:

Background: Tooth loss may alter temporomandibular joint loading and morphology. Its relationship with articular eminence inclination remains unclear.. This study aimed to assess the effect of dental status (presence/absence of an occlusal support zone) on the articular eminence inclination (AEI) using panoramic radiographs. Methods: This cross-sectional study was conducted on the panoramic radiographs of ۹۰ patients, including ۳۰ completely edentulous, ۳۰ dentate, and ۳۰ partially edentulous patients with unilateral loss of posterior support. The AEI was calculated as the angle formed between the line connecting the deepest point of the glenoid fossa to the most prominent point of the articular eminence and the Frankfurt plane. The data were analyzed by ANOVA and the Tukey, Kruskal-Wallis, Mann-Whitney, and t-tests (alpha=۰.۰۵). Results: The right-side AEI in dentate patients (۵۸.۱±۲.۶ degrees) was significantly greater than that in fully edentulous (۴۹±۳.۶۴ degrees) and unilaterally edentulous (۵۰.۲±۶.۰۴ degrees) patients (P<۰.۰۰۱); the difference between the completely edentulous and unilaterally edentulous cases was not significant (P=۰.۵۶). Similarly, the left-side AEI in completely edentulous (۴۷.۳۳±۳.۲۴ degrees) and unilaterally edentulous (۵۰.۲±۶.۵۵) patients was not significantly different (P>۰.۰۵), but both values were significantly lower than that in dentate (۵۶.۷۷±۳.۲۴ degrees) patients (P<۰.۰۰۱). Dental status was an influential factor on AEI (P<۰.۰۰۱), but its interaction effect with gender was not significant (P=۰.۰۸۴). Conclusion: Dental status had a significant effect on the AEI, irrespective of gender. AEI in dentate patients was significantly greater than that in completely and partially edentulous patients, but was not significantly different in the latter two groups.